AI-Debiased Article
Rewritten from BBC — World 1 min read
39 Mainstream framing L R No clear lean ✓ verified
Why this rating? · 4 signals

Signals flagged in the original

  • loaded language: 'extreme rain'
  • loaded language: 'pushing orangutan populations to extinction'
  • framing: headline asserting a conclusion
  • vague attribution: study says

Analyzed by our bias model Full breakdown ↓

Study reports climate change impacts on rare orangutan populations

A study has found that extreme weather events linked to climate change are threatening orangutan populations, with an estimated 7% of the world's rarest orangutans impacted. The findings underscore the ongoing challenges faced by these species in the context of climate change.

A recent study indicates that extreme weather events, attributed to climate change, are contributing to the decline of orangutan populations. The research highlights that approximately 7% of the world's rarest orangutans have been affected by these conditions.

Annotating as

No note attached

on this article.

Bias Analysis

Bias score 39/100
wirepublicmainstream flavoredpartisanadvocacy
Inflammatory language 100/100
Sentiment -20/100

Bias Indicators Removed

  • loaded language: 'extreme rain'
  • loaded language: 'pushing orangutan populations to extinction'
  • framing: headline asserting a conclusion
  • vague attribution: study says

Original vs. Neutral

Original Headline

Four days of extreme rain killed 7% of world's rarest orangutans, study says

Neutral Headline

Study reports climate change impacts on rare orangutan populations