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Attendance at EU Climate Action Academy Session on Climate Disinformation and Public Communication

Arne Lindahl

Arne Lindahl

Promotional material for EU Climate Action Academy webinar on navigating climate disinformation and misinformation in digital communication environments.

Structural Issue Identified

Climate communication environments are increasingly affected by misinformation and disinformation across digital and social media platforms, creating implementation and public trust challenges within climate policy communication.

What problem this work relates to

Public climate communication now operates within fragmented information environments where misinformation, platform amplification and rapidly produced digital content may affect public understanding, institutional trust and engagement with climate policy.

Structural Adjustment & Implementation

Attended an EU Climate Action Academy online learning session examining how climate misinformation and disinformation circulate across digital communication environments.

The session focused on practical approaches to analysing misinformation narratives, understanding amplification mechanisms within social media environments and identifying how misleading climate communication develops across online platforms.

Discussion also explored the operational challenges this creates for climate communication, public engagement and institutional trust within European climate policy environments.

Observable Effect

Expanded understanding of how climate communication operates within evolving digital information environments.

The session also strengthened practical awareness of how misinformation dynamics may affect public engagement, institutional communication and implementation of climate-related policy objectives.

Related Work:

Relevant Institutions and Policy Frameworks

Clemis Communications

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