Poll shows Texans taking global warming seriously 
By Todd Ackerman, Houston Chronicle Science Writer 
Copyright 1998 Hoston Chronicle
September 25, 1998
As Houston readies to bring together the nation's leading experts on 
climate change, a new poll shows a majority of Texans believe 
global warming is occurring and is so serious a threat that they're willing to pay more for 
cleaner energy sources.
In a 
new Texas Poll commissioned by the Sierra Club, 58 percent of Texans said they 
believe 
global warming mainly is caused by emissions from the burning of coal and oil and 64 percent 
said the United States should reduce that dependence, even if it means paying 
more for cleaner 
energy sources.
And one-third of respondents said they want the U.S. government to make 
replacing oil and coal energy with renewable sources a priority like the 
Manhattan Project, the World War II project to build the atomic bomb.  
"Contrary to claims that people are skeptical of 
global warming, this sends a message that people understand the causes, impacts and ways to 
respond," said Ken Kramer, director of the Sierra Club's Lone Star chapter. 
"The poll results should be a wake-up call in Texas and Washington."
Peggy Venable, 
director of the Texas Citizens for a Sound Economy, said the poll shows her 
group has an educational chore ahead of it: 
"Twenty years after the Ice Age scare, the new Chicken Little warning is 
global warming - and we've got a big problem if these poll numbers are 
right."
Houstonians will get a chance to hear both sides today at conference sponsored 
by the Houston Forum. Forum director Marsha Tucker said it will mark the first 
time experts on both sides have come together to lay out and debate the 
issue.
The Texas Poll also found that 19 percent of Texans disagree that 
global warming is occurring, 16 percent disagree that coal and oil emissions are causing 
global warming and 15 percent disagree with the idea that 
global warming is so serious a threat that we should pay more for cleaner energy 
sources.
Besides the 33 percent of Texans who believe a solution to 
global warming should be made a Manhattan Project-like priority, 44 percent believe it should 
be a moderate priority, 10 percent a low priority and 5 percent no priority.
Sixty-three 
percent of respondents believe 
global warming contributes to extreme fluctuations in the world's weather, including El Nino 
events, heat waves, flooding and droughts. Seventeen percent disagree with that 
idea.
The Texas Poll, conducted Aug. 12-27 by the University of Texas Office of 
Survey Research, 
surveyed 1,004 adult Texans in a random telephone sample. The poll has a margin 
of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
The Houston Forum conference on 
global warming is open to the public and includes a morning session at the Houston Club 
composed of several 
panels on how the issue is being studied. The conference also includes a 
luncheon debate at the Rice Hotel between an adviser to Vice President Al Gore 
and a leading skeptic.
The morning event, which starts at 7:30 a.m., costs $ 95; the 11:45 a.m. 
luncheon is $ 
50; and the charge to attend both programs is $ 120.
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