World Risk Poll 2026 launch: Global attitudes to climate risk

The Lloyd's Register Building 71 Fenchurch Street London EC3M 4BS

About this Event

Global attitudes to climate risk (and why what people believe their neighbours think matters)

As confirmed by the World Meteorological Organization, the past three years (2023-25) have been the warmest on record. As a result, severe weather events have continued to become ever more frequent and intense, with deadly and cascading consequences.

Since 2019, the Lloyd’s Register Foundation World Risk Poll has tracked people’s experience of, and worry about, these severe weather events, as well as public perception of the threat posed by climate change, in around 140 countries around the world.

The Poll data has consistently shown high levels of global concern about climate change across this period. And yet, at local, national and international levels, the world still struggles to stimulate the full level of action and investment needed to meet the challenge, with some nations even going backwards on their climate commitments. Why?

For the first time, the 2026 edition of the World Risk Poll has gone deeper, asking 143,000 people around the world not just how concerned they are about the threat of climate change to people in their country, but how concerned they believe their fellow citizens to be – data that has been collected to inform the 2026 Human Development Report from the United Nations Development Programme.

Framed by the Poll data, this event will explore whether people’s perceptions of other people’s views are out of step with reality – and if people believe their fellow citizens care less about the climate crisis than themselves, is this putting a crippling handbrake on whole-of-society climate action?

This event will:

  • Launch the 2026 World Risk Poll report on climate change, contextualised within broader global trends in safety and risk perception.
  • Present the latest data from the Poll and other sources on public experience and perception of safety risks associate with climate change.
  • Explore the gap between personal perceptions of climate risk and perceptions of the beliefs of others, and discuss the implications this has for risk communication, policy, and efforts to drive effective, whole-of-society climate action.

This event will be of particular interest to climate communicators, campaigners, journalists, and policymakers, as well as anyone with an interest in public risk perception or who wants to know more about how their country experiences and responds to global safety challenges.

Moderator:

  • Gareth Redmond-King, Head of International Programme, Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit

Panellists:

  • Nancy Hey OBE, Director of Evidence and Insight, Lloyd’s Register Foundation
  • Yanchun Zhang, Chief Statistician, United Nations Development Programme
  • Robert Böhm, Professor of Psychology, University of Vienna
  • Dr Andrea Taylor, Associate Professor in Risk Communication, University of Leeds
  • Professor Bobby Duffy, Director of the Policy Institute, King’s College London

Event timings:

  • 2.30pm – registration and refreshments
  • 3.00pm – session start (presentation and panel discussion)
  • 3.50pm – audience Q&A
  • 4.00pm – networking drinks
  • 5.00pm – event closed

Lloyd's Register Foundation; Human Development Report Office, United Nations Development Programme

About Lloyd’s Register Foundation

Lloyd’s Register Foundation is an independent global safety charity that supports research, innovation, and education to make the world a safer place. Its mission is to use the best evidence and insight, including the World Risk Poll, to help the global community focus on tackling the world’s most pressing safety and risk challenges. For more information about Lloyd’s Register Foundation, visit lrfoundation.org.uk.

About the Human Development Report Office of the United Nations Development Programme

The Human Development Report Office (HDRO) works to publish the Human Development Report (HDR), an independent report commissioned by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

The mission of the Human Development Report Office (HDRO) is to advance human development. The goal is to contribute towards the expansion of opportunities, choice and freedom. The office works towards this goal by promoting innovative new ideas, advocating practical policy changes, and constructively challenging policies and approaches that constrain human development. The office works with others to achieve change through writing and research, data analysis and presentation, support to national and regional analysis and outreach and advocacy work. To find out more about the HDRO and HDR, visit hdr.undp.org.