Questioning Net Zero: a case study of the UK’s national press coverage

Published online: 10 Apr 2026
  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    18-04-2026 to 18-04-2027

    Available on-demand until 18th April 2027

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Publication

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

In recent years, opposition to Net Zero policies has increased in several European countries, particularly among right-wing populist parties, driven by concerns over perceived high or unfair costs and associated lifestyle changes. In the UK, the Net Zero policy has become a highly contested political issue, provoking campaigns against it in the press. We carry out a case study of the coverage by nine legacy UK newspapers of the Net Zero policy in a four-month period in 2023. We identify common claims about the policy (such as high costs, unequal cost distribution and ‘whataboutism’), then analyse how often inaccurate or unchallenged statements appear in the articles, broken down by outlet and article type. We find a limited number of inaccurate statements in our sample of around 500 articles, but many misleading statements. Four right-wing outlets each had more than 70% of their editorials/opinion pieces discussing Net Zero containing at least one misleading statement; and between 39% and 60% of these same outlets’ editorial/opinion sections included at least three misleading statements. Given that anti-Net Zero discourses continue to be prevalent in the media across Europe, our research framework can act as a replicable method for studies of other countries, to show the nature and extent of these discourses in the media, and their possible contribution to the shaping of the political debate.

Contact details

Education Provider

Taylor and Francis Online

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Informa PLC, 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG

[email protected]

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