The USC Dornsife-Union Bank LABarometer survey on sustainability and resilience also reveals a 24% increase in the number of Los Angeles County residents who say their next car is likely to be electric and that 3 of 4 Angelenos believe climate change is caused by human activity.
Contact: Jim Key, 619-253-1077 or jameskey@usc.edu or Jenesse Miller, 213-810-8554 or jenessem@usc.edu
The second annual USC Dornsife-Union Bank LABarometer survey regarding sustainability and resilience examines how Los Angeles County residents experience and interact with their natural environment in the midst of a warming climate.
Survey topics included: heat and pollution exposure, natural disaster preparedness, pro-environmental consumption, transportation behavior, and the steps residents are taking to prevent climate change from worsening as well as the measures they’re taking to live with the effects of it.
Key Findings
- Half of L.A. County residents avoided going outdoors at some point in the last 12 months because of air quality concerns related to wildfires — a 30% increase from 2020.
- 59% of Angelenos said their next car is likely to be an electric or hybrid vehicle, a 23% increase from 2020. More specifically, 4 in 10 Angelenos expect their next car to be zero-emission, a 24% increase from 2020. That’s in line with the percentage of all U.S. residents who say their next car will be electric, according to Pew Research Center.
- 75% of Angelenos now say climate change is caused mostly by human activity, up 3 percentage points from 2020. That’s significantly higher than the 60% of U.S. residents who acknowledge global warming is mostly caused by human activities, according to the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication.
- Black Angelenos are much more likely to work outdoors, unsheltered, and thereby at greater risk of exposure to harsh environmental conditions. More than a quarter (27%) work outside with no cover, compared to 18% of Latinos, 15% of whites, and 10% of Asians.
- Since 2020, the percentage of Angelenos who believe climate change is a threat to their well-being has increased 4 points to 77%. The percentage who say local government is doing enough to fight climate change is little changed at 18%.
- Two-thirds of Angelenos say their own actions can make a difference in fighting climate change. Seniors (60+) were 23% more likely than young people (18—39) to believe individual actions could make a difference.
Expert Analysis
“The startling increase in the percentage of Angelenos who didn’t want to leave their homes because of unsafe air resulting from wildfires really speaks to the growing threat wildfires pose to quality of life in Los Angeles. Compared to just a year ago, our results suggest that more Angelenos are feeling the impact of climate change on their daily lives and plans.”
– Kyla Thomas, director of LABarometer at the USC Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research.
Download video and audio of Kyla Thomas’s commentary here.
“The fact that a large majority of Angelenos expect their next car to be an electric or hybrid vehicle doesn’t just have implications for air quality and the fight against climate change — it raises important questions about urban planning, including what happens to the city’s 500-plus gas station sites when new gas-powered cars are no longer available. The ripple effects from the switch to electric vehicles will be felt across the city for decades to come.”
– Christopher Hawthorne, director of 3rd LA at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, Chief Design Officer for the city of Los Angeles
Less than a year ago, Hawthorne’s 3rd LA project hosted a USC Dornsife event, Pump to Plug, to consider creative responses to the challenges and opportunities posed — in urban, architectural, and environmental terms — by the transition to electric transportation. Six leading architecture, landscape, and urban design firms shared creative ways to meet the challenges and opportunities posed by growing electric vehicle use in L.A.