I’m Sam.
And I’m Rob.
When Sarah Ott was growing up in Florida in the 1990s,
she loved playing in nature.
She picked up litter in the street and took it home to recycle.
But later, in college, Sarah became surrounded by people in her community
who didn’t share her love of the environment –
people who didn’t believe that climate change was real.
And slowly, Sarah started to doubt it as well.
Climate deniers - people who don’t believe that climate change is happening,
or that it isn’t caused by humans -
make up around nine percent of the American population,
according to some estimates.
Now, Sarah works as a climate campaigner at the US National Centre for Science Education,
teaching children the science behind climate change,
but her journey there was a difficult one, and she lost many friends on the way.
In this programme, we’ll be discussing climate deniers,
and finding out how to talk with people who doubt the science of global warming.
And as usual, we’ll be learning some new vocabulary as well.
But before that, I have a question for you, Rob. Whatever climate deniers think,