Penplusbytes’ Climate Crisis Journalism Project to Train Journalists on Climate Change Reporting
Relatively
little space is allocated to climate change issues in the media. In a 2010
study by the Reuters Institute on media coverage of climate
change in Africa , findings showed that about 60 per cent of media persons
interviewed identified a lack of training and time pressures as major reasons
why climate change has rarely generated coverage commensurate to its
significance for the continent’s future prosperity.
Although
some steps have been taken to address the aforementioned issues, it is worth
noting that the dearth of awareness on the part of citizens about the causes
and impacts of climate change has been very low. For many news media and editors,
environment is a non-topic although media can help raise awareness of the
impact of climate change on our daily lives.
According
to recommendations from the Reuters
Institute study, the media can do a lot more in shaping
public understanding of climate change and public policies. The poor perception
of the subject by both editors and journalists can be reshaped through training
and workshops.
In
light of this, Penplusbytes with support from DW Akademie under its Climate
Crisis Journalism Project, will from the 25th to the 27th of January 2022, gather
selected Ghanaian journalists and build their capacity in the subject matter to
enable them conduct in-depth and investigative reporting on climate-related
issues.
The
three-day training session will be delivered by climate change experts and
seasoned journalists in the environment and climate fields who will be engaged
as resource persons to expose and orient the selected journalists to the
intricacies of climate change, international best practices, trust building,
and addressing disinformation, among other topic areas.
According
to the Executive Director of Penplusbytes, Jerry Sam, "It is imperative
to fight the growing climate crisis with a multi-pronged approach and this
training will seek to equip the selected journalists with the requisite
knowledge and skills to inform, educate and shape public discourse on the
climate crisis in a responsible manner, enabling the people to act and shape
the clean, green and sustainable climate for the future and its generations”.
To
assess and sustain in the short term the impact of the trainings received, Programme
Manager for Penplusbytes, Precious Ankomah says, journalists will be motivated through
a competitive micro grant system for in-depth stories generation around climate
change in Ghana.
The trained journalists will also be mentored by
seasoned experts and will go through some refresher courses that will be delivered
in a hybrid format (both virtual and face-to-face engagements).
About Penplusbytes
Penplusbytes
is a not-for-profit organization driving change through innovations in the
following key areas: using new digital technologies to enable good governance
and accountability, new media and innovations, climate and well-being, and
enhancing oversight for effective utilisation of mining, oil and gas revenue
and resources.
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