People and Climate Change 2026
People and Climate Change 2026

The Ipsos People and Climate Change Report 2026

In this year’s People and Climate Change report we look at individuals’ need to act in the climate crisis, the transition to net zero, and the role of ESG as a corporate priority in 2026.

Welcome to the Ipsos People and Climate Change Report which explores perceptions of the risks facing us from the climate crisis as well as attitudes across 31 countries to the energy transition. Three of the last four years have been the hottest on record. Yet the individual desire to act on climate change has fallen over the same period. That tension sits at the heart of this report.

Key findings

As temperatures rise, the individual responsibility to act has fallen. The past 11 years have been the warmest in the modern era, but people increasingly place less responsibility in needing to act. In the last five years, all countries surveyed in this report in both 2021 and 2026 have seen falls in the proportion who agree that individuals would be failing future generations by not acting against climate change. 

Short-term fear is countering long-term preparation. While climate concern remains present – 59% on average across 31 countries say they country should be doing more in the fight against climate change - more immediate risks are seen as greater priorities. Our What Worries the World survey finds concern about climate change in 11th place, behind more tangible, immediate worries issues like crime, unemployment, and inflation. 

The energy transition is at a crossroads. Public support for transitioning to clean energy is increasingly conditional, contingent on affordability, reliability, and security trade-offs. The Ipsos Energy Transition Barometer finds one in two (50% across 31 countries) support governments prioritizing low energy prices even if emissions increase.

Values-based shopping is growing despite price pressures and political backlash. 56% of Americans and 62% of Canadians say price influenced their shopping more in 2025. At the same time, The Conscious Consumer Index rose from 38% to 40%, with a growing share of purchasers in North America now factoring in sustainability considerations when shopping.

The quiet integration of ESG. Fear of backlash has led companies toward an approach of ‘strategic silence’ - just 21% of Ipsos Reputation Council Members prefer to speak out on potentially divisive issues. However, behind the scenes, ESG continues to be embedded throughout business. 81% of Council Members agree that ESG initiatives provide a competitive advantage in attracting and retaining new talent, and 60% agree that poor ESG performance now has material consequences.

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People and Climate Change 2026

People and Climate Change 2026

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