Media inform the public, thereby influencing societal debates and political decisions. Despite climate change’s importance, drivers of media attention to climate change remain differently understood. Here we assess how different sociopolitical and extreme weather events affect climate change media coverage, both immediately and in the weeks following the event. To this end, we construct a data set of over 90,000 climate change articles published in nine major German newspapers over the past three decades and apply fixed effects panel regressions to control for confounders. We find that United Nations Climate Change Conferences affect coverage most strongly and most persistently. Climate protests incite climate coverage that extends well beyond the reporting on the event itself, whereas many articles on weather extremes do not mention climate change. The influence of all events has risen over time, increasing the media prominence of climate change.
Authors
- Citation
- Lochner, J., Stechemesser, A., Wenz, L. (2025): Climate summits and protests have a strong impact on climate change media coverage in Germany. - Communications Earth and Environment, 5, 279.
- Published in
- Germany
- Rights Holder
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Table of Contents
- Climate summits and protests have a strong impact on climate change media coverage in Germany 0
- Results 0
- UN Climate Change Conferences draw most attention to climatechange 0
- Climate protests and IPCC publications amplify climate change coverage 0
- Effect of all event types on climate attention has strongly increased in the lastdecade 0
- Discussion 0
- Methods 0
- Climate change and event-specific coverage 0
- Newsdata 0
- Dictionary-based approach 0
- Validation 0
- Aggregation to week-level 0
- Climate change coverage measure 0
- Event-specific coverage measure 0
- Climate-related sociopoliticalevents 0
- Binary measures for sociopoliticalevents 0
- Extreme weather measures 0
- Data sources 0
- Heatwaves 0
- Extreme rainfall 0
- Spatial aggregation 0
- Temporal aggregation 0
- Domestic extremeevents 0
- Control variables 0
- Sociopolitical events as controls 0
- International extreme heat and rainfall 0
- Further extreme weatherevents 0
- Empirical strategy 0
- Main empirical specification to assess effects on climate change media coverage 0
- Empirical specification to assess event-specific coverage 0
- Data availability 0
- Code availability 0
- References 0
- Acknowledgements 0
- Author contributions 0
- Funding 0
- Competing interests 0
- Additional information 0