“…In Britain, surveys from both 2014 and late 2016/early 2017 show that only 37% and 36% of the population, respectively, believe that climate change is caused either mainly or entirely by human activity (Capstick et al, 2015; Fisher et al, 2018). In other surveys from late 2015 and the first half of 2016 where individuals did not have to assign a degree of human responsibility for climate change, approximately 60% of respondents thought that humans had some responsibility for climate change (Kenny, 2018; 2020). While believing in humans’ contribution to climate change does not automatically equate with supporting mitigation measures – as has been shown in a British study examining the relationship between belief in anthropogenic climate change and support for a net-zero emissions target by 2050 (Fisher, 2019) – individuals who do not believe in anthropogenic climate change are much less likely to prioritise action on climate change (Krosnick et al, 2006; Van Der Linden et al, 2015) given that they either believe it is due to natural factors or even that it is not occurring at all.…”