Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Wind turbines in Amsterdam
Wind turbines in Amsterdam - Credit: Photo: Pantona / Wikimedia Commons
Nature
Climate change
global warming
climate agreement
I&O Research
Peter Kanne
climate change skeptics
Thursday, 7 March 2019 - 07:49

Share this article:

More climate change skeptics in Netherlands; especially men and elderly

The number of Dutch people who are worried about climate change decreased significantly over the past months. While the group who thinks that addressing greenhouse gas emissions is going too far is growing since the government announced their climate plans, according to a survey by Peter Kanne of I&O Research, AD reports.

At the end of 2015 two thirds of Dutch thought the cabinet should do more to limit the emission of greenhouse gasses. Now it's only 48 percent. In the same period, the group that thinks the government should do less grew from 7 to 19 percent. Late last month 65 percent of Dutch said they were worried about climate change, a significant decrease compared to the 78 percent who were worried about this in December.

Two thirds of Dutch are convinced that humans are responsible for global warming. But the group that thinks their own actions can make a difference is much smaller. Some 60 percent of Dutch think that as long as large companies do not reduce their CO2 emissions, their own actions don't matter.

Men, the elderly and people with lower levels of education are considerably more skeptical about climate change and their role therein than women, young people and higher educated. According to Kanne, this is because the first group has more to lose if there is a stricter climate policy. "Men eat a lot more meat and drive more cars than women. Older people have more gains than young people who, for example, do not have a car yet. And among the lower educated the mistrust in politics, the press and science is big." Older men with a high education and above-average income who vote for the VVD have the largest carbon footprint, according to Kanne.

"The skepticism about climate change is increasing", Kanne concluded, according to AD. He believes this turnaround is linked to the draft Climate Agreement the government presented just before Christmas. "In our latest poll we see that people are not that enthusiastic about it. They are afraid that it will cost them a lot of money. And of course it is not pleasant either: we are called upon give up nice things like eating meat, long showers and going on holiday by plane. And you do not immediately get anything in return."

According to Kanne, this leads to what psychologists call cognitive dissonance - people adjust their conclusions and seek resonance from parties that question the need for reducing CO2 emissions. "The pronouncedly skeptical reactions of Klaas Dijkhoff [VVD], Sybrand Buma [CDA] and Thierry Baudet [FvD] attracted a lot of attention at the beginning of this year. Just like the reports from De Telegraaf about meatballs that should be on ration. The news that the energy bill this year will be over 300 euros higher on average, came on top of that."

More like this

Image
Solar plant in Ameland, Friesland, July 2019.
Voters want to be greener, but without making sacrifices: survey
Image
People swimming in Amsterdam. June 20, 2026.
“Unmistakably” climate change: Current heat virtually impossible 50 years ago
Image
Bikes parked on the Nieuwe Brug in Amsterdam along Prins Hendrikkade, near the Damrak. Feb. 2020
Over 800,000 Dutch living in increasingly warm areas without enough trees, greenery
Image
Wind turbines seen through the smoke and chimneys of oil refinery Pernis in Rotterdam
Dutch greenhouse gas emissions dropped 5% in Q1 of 2026
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Schiphol selects KLM, dnata and Viggo as sole ground handlers for next seven years
  • Oranje set for journey home after World Cup Exit, earn $11 million in prize money
  • This June is the second-warmest on record in the Netherlands after June 2023
  • Dutch payment fraud rises 30% in 2025, losses reach €198 million
  • Amsterdam orders student housing landlord to lower rents after illegal overcharges found

Top stories

  • Eurostar cancels many London-Amsterdam trains after Rotterdam rail fire
  • Morocco fans overjoyed in cities after beating Oranje; Fireworks thrown at Hague police
  • Oranje crash out of World Cup after another penalty shootout heartbreak against Morocco
  • Storm damage claims surge after weekend of severe weather across the Netherlands
  • Law changes take effect July 1: Wage, social benefits rise, import parcel fee introduced

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content