How global crises compete for our attention: Insights from 13.5 million tweets on climate change during COVID-19

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted peoples’ daily lives and dominated the public discourse. It thus displaced people’s attention to and concerns about climate change. We analyse 13.5 million tweets by 3.2 million distinct users on climate change posted before and after the onset of the pandemic (2018–2021) and show that attention to climate dropped substantially in 2020 with the onset of the pandemic. While research has helped to explain this drop in the context of issue attention theory, our analysis highlights a remarkable recovery in attention in 2021 towards pre-pandemic levels. Moreover, our large-scale, transformer-based text analysis reveals important thematic shifts during this period. In particular, we show a sustained drop in attention to activist movements and subsequently an increased focus on climate causes and climate solutions. Activist movements, such as the school protests that have mobilized millions around the globe in 2019, have measurably lost traction on Twitter. However, in parts due to increased awareness of causes and solutions, the climate change discourse in general recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Publication
Energy Research & Social Science
Tim Repke
Tim Repke
Researcher
Max Callaghan
Max Callaghan
Researcher
William Lamb
William Lamb
Researcher
Jan Minx
Jan Minx
Head