Search
-
Earth Day 2023 – Is concern and focus slipping on climate change?
A new global Ipsos survey of 21,231 adults reveals that, on average across 29 countries, just under a third (32%) of Swiss people agree that their government has a clear plan in place for how government, businesses and people are going to work together to tackle climate change. Agreement has fallen since last year by an average of eight percentage points across the 26 countries surveyed both in 2022 and this year.
-
Pharma knocks tech off the top spot as most trusted industry in Ipsos' latest global report on Trust
Business leaders are not trusted to tell the truth – yet are seen to have a responsibility to speak out on issues according to the new Ipsos Global Trustworthiness Monitor report.
-
Consumers demand innovation from their energy suppliers
New services from Ipsos and Synthesio help energy and utilities brands track consumer trends and spot innovation opportunities.
-
Climate change: a growing skepticism
Purchasing power is now the key priority on a global level. Despite the importance they attribute to the climate and extreme weather events, people are less inclined to become involved and are more dubious as to the human origins of the phenomenon.
-
From understanding to activation
The five segments identified highlight the need to consider different strategies for citizen engagement. How we approach each will vary.
-
68% globally are willing to accept new policies encouraging sustainable technology adoptions
Incentives, discounts and other inducements are most supported policies to help tackle climate change in new global study ahead of COP27
-
The Business of Regulation
ESG is driving intervention and nearly four-in-five Reputation Council members tell Ipsos that their business is more regulated now than it was five years ago.
-
Data Dive: How people feel about climate change and what to do about it
In five infographics, we break down what Ipsos’ global polling reveals about citizens’ views on the ‘climate emergency’, who is responsible and actions to take now.
-
Earth Day 2022: few can correctly identify actions which are best at cutting carbon emissions
New research by Ipsos shows people around the world are not very likely to make environmentally friendly changes that would have the most impact on cutting carbon emissions. Less than half say they are likely to make changes such as eating fewer dairy products (41%), eating less meat (44%), changing their household heating system to a low carbon system (44%), despite these being some of the most effective ways in cutting carbon emissions.