81% of Poles consider climate change to be the biggest challenge for humanity

by   CIJ News iDesk III
2021-10-27   10:24
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81% of Poles consider climate change and its consequences to be the greatest challenge for humanity in the 21st century. in the case of respondents aged 15-29 to 86% in the case of respondents older than 65 years and from 77% in the case of persons on low pensions up to 83% in the case of persons on high pensions.

The taxation of the reduced size of Poles (82%), the change in climate affects their livelihoods (this is five percentage points higher than in the previous year and higher than 77% in Central Europe).

The impact of climate change is felt by young people (84%) as well as the older generation (86%), with 80% of respondents aged 30-64 accounting for this. A similar view is also expressed by respondents in all social and economic categories (82% in the case of high-income persons and 81% in the case of low-income persons).

Poles are more pessimistically encouraging the resilience of their region to a strong level of green transformation. Respondents aged 15-29 and 57% of respondents aged 65 and older, with a total of 55% of Polish respondents with children under the age of 18 considering that their national authorities would limit the issue of small-scale dwindles, although many respondents in advance of the age, it is lower and yields 45%, according to the report.

Of the 64% of respondents surveyed, they are considered to be conducted by a number of fisheries measures - similar to those used in the conservation of rats linked to COVID-19 - which change changes in conservation.

Simply 11% of Poles consider that global warming is not a fact of human activity. The view was shared by 13% of men, but only 8% of women and 7% of respondents aged 15-29 years.

The size of Poles (58%) considers that their region has a high degree of energy efficiency in order to provide a full climate for climate, taking into account the share of up to 63% of all Europeans in Europe. partly less than men (54%), which stipulates the difference in the percentage of percentage points. The share of natural energy is both in all age groups.

In another place, nuclear energy is found, which denies 16% of Poles (the result is four points higher than in Central Europe). Differentiation is important in terms of lungs: nuclear energy is much more often denied by men (24%) than women (8%). Development fees in the field of nuclear energy are also higher for people with higher incomes (20%) compared to people with lower incomes (13%).

The amount of energy denied by 16% of Poles. On the one hand, it is much higher than the increasing role of earth gas (7%). In terms of energy consumption, differentiation is important: women (20%) are much more inclined to save energy than men (12%).

It also follows from the survey that Polacy at a higher rate (63%) will see the introduction of data from products and services that most contribute to global occupancy, although at a lower rate than the European total (69%). They also call for a minimum 5-year guarantee for each electrical or electronic product (94%) and for the representation of lots on short distances by high, low-emission (88%) cooperation with the region. They also deny the delicious resources, as well as the benefits of education and the increase of youth awareness in the context of balanced consumption (93%).

"Europeans expect from the public authorities of the European fisheries sector as well as the tools to help them in the climate change climate. the purity of clean energy, energy efficiency, unleashed in the context of improved mobility and innovation, which will help to limit the temperature rise to 1.5 ° C or lower," commented EBI's Vice President, Ambroise Fayolle.

In the research carried out from 26 August to 22 September 2021, more than 30,000 respondents took part, with a representative panel from each of the 30 countries surveyed.

Source: EIB and ISBnews

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