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Answer Overview

Response rates from 1.6k Wood Quay A voters.

83%
Yes
17%
No
76%
Yes
13%
No
7%
Yes, and provide more incentives for alternative energy production
2%
No, provide more incentives for alternative energy production instead
2%
No, just enforce existing regulations
0%
No, and the current government is over-regulating businesses
0%
No, and I believe global warming is a natural occurrence

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 1.6k Wood Quay A voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 1.6k Wood Quay A voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Wood Quay A voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9DM9X3Qanswered…1yr1Y

Climate change doesn’t exist, left wing democracy uses it as a mass propaganda machine to control the population

 @9ZK26KRanswered…1wk1W

It depends on the size of the business, regulations are important but if enforced on a national level irrelevant to scale then could cause severe closures of small buisnness due to regulatory requirements and costs.

 @9ZHKMZ6answered…1wk1W

Larger more profitable businesses should face increased regulations. Smaller local business should receive incentives for alternative energy options

 @9ZMM8LLanswered…5 days5D

Yes, but it should relative to the size and nature of the business eg. Data centres of multinational tech giants

 @9ZKJ5BRanswered…1wk1W

Yes but only if they actually make sense. Incentives should be made to go towards environmentally better ways of working.

 @9Z9753Wanswered…2wks2W

What's the point when some of the biggest polluting countries don't do anything and then we import their goods?

 @9YN9KXHanswered…2wks2W

Yes i believe it is important to reduce carbon emissions but it most be done in a way that doesnt affect the business owners or taxes.

 @9YM6ZZHanswered…2wks2W

Yes but less on SMEs as they are already struggling with the costs of trading (minimum wage, overheads, etc)