
“However, the knowledge levels about climate change and global warming did vary between the urban and rural respondents. Urban respondents were more aware of climate change and global warming and they often cited the media as their source of information,” said BBC World Service Trust Research Officer Sam Otieno. Mr Otieno said on Friday that the voices of citizens who were worst affected was often absent from national and international climate debates.
“And we believe that understanding public perceptions of climate change could help to formulate advice on how governments and the society can more widely deal with this important issue,” he said.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Deputy Executive Director Angela Cropper said there is “need to help people to understand more clearly what climate change is, why is it important to them at a local level, what are options they may have, how it might affect them in the immediate and long-term future.” She continued: “I think that requires a very good and systematic approach to public education and especially for rural and remote communities.”…
Matatu stage (bus station) of Nanyuki, Kenya, shot by , Wikimedia Commons, under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License
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