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BBC climate doc adviser: Earth is sending us really powerful messages

Chris Rapley, scientific advisor on the BBC's new climate change documentary, talks rising temperatures, hammering home the message, and David Attenborough
A wildfire burning
You could hardly watch the news last year without seeing wildfires, says Chris Rapley
AFP/Getty Images

鈥淚t really does hammer home the message that it鈥檚 not some science-y issue, it affects you and animals,鈥 says Chris Rapley of the BBC鈥檚 new climate change documentary: Climate Change 鈥 The facts.

The former director of the Science Museum in London served as science adviser to the show, which he believes is incredibly timely after last year鈥檚 extreme weather and a drumbeat of striking climate science.

鈥2018 has seen a big shift. The planet sending us really, really powerful strident messages, you could hardly watch evening news without seeing wildlifes, or storms, or floods. It鈥檚 gone from a taboo subject to being semi-normalised in the news.鈥滳hris Rapley, scientific adviser on the BBC鈥檚 new climate change documentary, talks rising temperatures, hammering home the message, and David Attenborough

On the science side he cites the UN climate science panel鈥檚 report on , as well as the increasing speed of work to attribute events such as last summer鈥檚 heatwave to climate change.

Such attribution has helped to turn the issue from an abstract one into a concrete one, and therefore could shift public attitudes, he believes.

鈥淭he story is penetrating consciousness and we are probably at some sort of a tipping point [in the public],鈥 says Rapley.

He advised the BBC on which experts to talk to for the documentary, 鈥渃aught a few things鈥 on the science, and tried to strike the right tone between fear and hope.

Greta Thunberg
Greta Thunberg has started a climate change protest movement
Ross Kirby/BBC

鈥淚t tries to avoid the danger of over-delivering on the doom and gloom, and leaving people helpless and without any sense of agency,鈥 he says. But it is still 鈥減retty uncompromising鈥 about the threat from climate change, he adds.

Steering the right path on spelling out what needs to be done to slow climate change, and avoiding telling people what to do, was difficult, he says. Rapley had his fingers burned before in his previous role, when the Science Museum ran a climate exhibition called Prove It, which critics felt had overstepped the line between informing people and advocacy.

鈥淧eople certainly don鈥檛 want to be told what to do. That鈥檚 an absolute no-no,鈥 says Rapley. In the BBC documentary, such actions are outlined in an aspirational way to avoid finger-wagging.

Asked why the show鈥檚 presenter, David Attenborough, has become such a champion of climate change action recently, Rapley says: 鈥淚 think he鈥檚 realised that he鈥檚 hugely influential. I think he鈥檚 realised he can make a difference.鈥

Rapley takes comfort that climate sceptics have been reduced to a 鈥渧ery small number.鈥

But he worries about the wider rise of fake news and anti-scientific views, such as flat earthers and anti-vaxxers.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a more general pushback against expertise and knowledge and understanding. In a way that鈥檚 almost more worrying because it鈥檚 much more difficult to deal with.鈥

Topics: Climate change