Illustration of Americans showing reluctance for personal carbon fees but support for taxing corporate emissions, based on recent polls.
Illustration of Americans showing reluctance for personal carbon fees but support for taxing corporate emissions, based on recent polls.
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Polls show limited appetite for personal carbon fees as more Americans favor charging companies

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Americans’ willingness to pay a personal carbon fee remains modest: an AP-NORC/EPIC survey in 2023 found 38% would pay $1 per month, down from 52% in 2021, while a 2024 follow-up shows continued reluctance at higher amounts and broader support for taxing corporate emissions.

The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC) reported in an April 11, 2023 release that 38% of U.S. adults would support paying a $1 monthly carbon fee on their household energy use, a decline of 14 percentage points from 52% in 2021. Support falls as the fee rises: roughly three in ten would pay $10, $20, or $40 per month, and about one in five would pay $75 or $100. (epic.uchicago.edu)

Newer AP-NORC/EPIC polling in 2024 finds the public still balks at higher personal fees, but shows greater support for making companies pay. In that survey, 58% said they support a tax that companies must pay on the carbon they emit. By comparison, willingness to pay larger monthly household fees remained markedly lower. (apnorc.org)

The 2024 poll also asked who bears responsibility for addressing climate change. Majorities said corporations and industry (62%) and the U.S. federal government (59%) have a great deal or a lot of responsibility. Far fewer—41%—said the same of individual people. In 2019, half of Americans (50%) assigned a great deal or a lot of responsibility to individuals, indicating a measurable decline over time. (apnorc.org)

Context from the same polling series helps explain shifting views. After dipping in 2023, the share of Americans who say climate change (for those who believe it is happening) is caused mostly or entirely by human activities rebounded to 54% in 2024, up from 49% in 2023. (apnorc.org)

The debate has played out alongside prominent political rhetoric. In 2019, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D‑N.Y.) warned at an MLK Day event that “the world is going to end in 12 years if we don’t address climate change,” a line that drew widespread attention and subsequent pushback from scientists who objected to the framing. (realclearpolitics.com) That same year, then–presidential candidate Kamala Harris unveiled a climate platform built around $10 trillion in public and private investment over a decade. (cnbc.com)

Taken together, the AP-NORC/EPIC findings point to a persistent gap between acknowledging climate risks and accepting new personal costs to address them, even as many Americans favor policies that hold corporations and government more accountable. (apnorc.org)

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Illustration depicting an American family struggling with affordability crisis, checking bills amid sparse groceries and skipped healthcare, based on POLITICO poll.
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Poll reveals widespread American struggles with affordability

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A new POLITICO poll highlights intense financial pressures on Americans, with nearly half saying it is hard to afford essentials such as groceries, housing and health care. The survey, conducted in November, points to broad impacts on daily life, including people skipping medical care and cutting back on leisure spending, even as many voters remain skeptical of President Donald Trump’s claims that prices are falling.

A recent National Bureau of Economic Research report reveals that American families face $400 to $900 in yearly climate-related expenses. These costs stem from extreme weather events impacting insurance, energy, taxes, and health. The study highlights rising burdens, especially in disaster-prone areas.

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A new study indicates that the United States will need both green subsidies and carbon pricing to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. While subsidies can initially reduce emissions, they alone are insufficient without eventual taxes on carbon. Inconsistent policies across administrations could make the transition slower and more costly.

A new report by climate scientists and financial experts cautions that the world has underestimated the pace of global warming, potentially leading to trillions in economic losses by 2050. Governments and businesses are urged to prepare for worst-case scenarios amid accelerating temperature rises. Recent data shows 2025 as the third-warmest year on record, pushing closer to breaching the 1.5°C Paris Agreement threshold sooner than anticipated.

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The U.S. federal residential solar tax credit ended on December 31, 2025, altering the economics for homeowners considering rooftop solar. While panel prices hit near-historic lows and technology improves, state incentives now play a larger role. Businesses can still claim a commercial credit for leased systems.

As the US-Iran conflict disrupts global oil via the Strait of Hormuz closure—driving prices above $100 per barrel—Trump administration rollbacks on vehicle fuel efficiency standards are amplifying domestic gasoline price surges, undoing decades of efficiency gains that previously blunted such shocks.

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In 2025, the United States under President Trump withdrew from the Paris Agreement and skipped COP30, marking a significant retreat from global climate efforts. Meanwhile, China led a surge in renewable energy deployment, driving down costs and accelerating transitions worldwide. Other nations, including those in Africa and Europe, stepped up to fill the leadership void left by the US.

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