Climate change in popular culture


References to climate change in popular culture have existed since the late 20th century and increased in the 21st century. Climate change, its impacts, and related human-environment interactions have been featured in nonfiction books and documentaries, but also literature, film, music, television shows and video games.
Science historian Naomi Oreskes noted in 2005 "a huge disconnect between what professional scientists have studied and learned in the last 30 years, and what is out there in the popular culture." An academic study in 2000 contrasted the relatively rapid acceptance of ozone depletion as reflected in popular culture with the much slower acceptance of the scientific consensus on climate change. Cultural responses have been posited as an important part of communicating climate change, but commentators have noted covering the topic has posed challenges due to its abstract nature. The prominence of climate change in popular culture increased during the 2010s, influenced by the climate movement, shifts in public opinion and changes in media coverage.
An important tool for evaluating the presence of climate change in popular culture is the Climate Reality Check. Like the Bechdel Test, it is a simple tool for evaluating climate change in any form of media, and consists of two conditions: "Climate change exists" in a narrative, and "a character knows it." An analysis of 250 of the most popular fictional films released between 2013 and 2022 and set in the present, recent past, or future found that only 12.8% passed the first part of the Climate Reality Check, and 9.6% passed the second part.

Film

Fictional films

A study of 250 of the most-watched fictional films released between 2013 and 2022 found that climate change existed in 12.8% of these films, while a global environmental problem existed in 26%. The presence of climate change, as well as common climate impacts, increased substantially over time. But when climate change and other environmental problems were present, they were generally mentioned in just one or two scenes, and their gravity and/or urgency was not emphasized.
Similarly, research analyzing 32 commercially and culturally significant fiction films released between 1972 and 2023 found that portrayals of environmentally-motivated violence—‘eco-tage’ and eco-terrorism’—tended to present more extreme acts of climate defense as morally illegitimate, with more recent and commercially successful films generally favoring binary hero–villain characterizations over morally complex narratives.
Some films that have been identified as containing descriptions of or references to climate change include:Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea – A meteor shower ignites the Van Allen radiation belt and causes abrupt global warming that will render Earth uninhabitable within three weeks. The United Nations attempts to resolve this by sending the submarine USOS Seaview into the Mariana Trench to fire a nuclear missile at the flaming belt.

Documentary films

Literature

Non-fiction

This refers to the classification non-fiction, without regard to whether the books are accurate or intended to be accurate.

Music

Climate change has been a topic of some popular music, particularly during the 2010s. The topic has been discussed in various genres, including pop, folk, electronic music and heavy metal. The New York Times found 192 references to climate change in English-language songs that entered the Billboard charts between 1999 and 2019, with around half of those between 2015 and 2019.

Theater

The Contingency Plan by Steve Waters is a diptych of plays first performed at the Bush Theatre in London. They are set in the near future, at a time during which severe tidal surges begin to submerge parts of coastal Britain.The Climate Monologues.

Television

Television documentaries

Fictional television

Captain Planet and the Planeteers had numerous episodes which dealt with global-warming including "Two Futures", "Heat Wave", "Domes of Doom", "The Ark", "Summit to Save Earth", "Greenhouse Planet", "A Perfect World", and "Planeteers Under Glass".

Late-night television

Comic books

Video games

Stand-up comedy

Other