Emotions play a key role in shaping people鈥檚 views on renewable energy: Study
Concern and worry over climate change result in support for renewable energy but don鈥檛 necessarily translate into opposition to fossil fuels, according to a study led by Steve Lorteau, doctoral candidate at the 重口味SM鈥檚 Faculty of Law.
Lorteau and researchers in psychology and sociology from the University of British Columbia, Universit茅 de Montr茅al, University of Ottawa and Universit茅 de Saint-Boniface set out to examine how emotions affect people鈥檚 perceptions of energy issues 鈥 and what implications this could have on shaping policies and communicating the impacts of climate change.
Their paper, , lays out the results of a meta-analysis on the link between climate concerns and worries and opinions about energy sources, based on data from over 85,000 participants in 36 countries. The studies asked questions such as, 鈥淎re you concerned about climate change?鈥 or 鈥淎re you worried about climate change?鈥 The studies also asked participants questions about how they view different energy sources, such as support for wind, oil and gas and nuclear.
鈥淎t first, we expected that if you are concerned about climate change, you would support renewable energy like wind and solar 鈥 and oppose coal, oil and gas to the same degree. But that鈥檚 not what we found,鈥 says Lorteau. 鈥淲e found that people with concerns and worries about climate change supported renewables, but also found these emotional responses only translate into a slight opposition to fossil fuels because people really like the status quo.
鈥淢ost people consider, 鈥楬ow am I going to gas my car if there are no fossil fuels? How am I going to heat my home?鈥欌
As a result, policymakers need to consider how people view energy and climate policy questions, since emotional aspects will shape how they view change, Lorteau says, noting this point builds on Faculty of Law Professor Brenda Cossman鈥檚 earlier work on how climate anxiety can lead people away from the political process.
鈥淚n terms of a policy outcome, people don鈥檛 want to be inconvenienced,鈥 Lorteau says. 鈥淭hey seem to think that we can solve climate change by just adding more renewables to the mix while keeping the same baseline of fossil fuels, which is not the consensus among climate scientists.鈥
The analysis also found that climate concerns and worries were not associated with support for 鈥 or opposition to 鈥 nuclear energy. This, Lorteau says, is due to the fact that support for nuclear energy tends to depend on context and how questions are worded. For example, the questions 鈥淒o you support zero-emissions nuclear energy?鈥 and 鈥淲ould you support a nuclear facility next door to you?鈥 resulted in equal opposition and support.
鈥淪ome countries rely heavily on nuclear energy 鈥 France being an example 鈥 and in those countries, I think [there is] some acceptance that nuclear energy is part of the status quo versus memories of where nuclear energy goes wrong and so those concerns become more salient,鈥 he says.
For his doctoral research, Lorteau is focused on zoning laws in Canada and the U.S. and how people are concerned about losing out on environmental policy change. He says zoning laws preserve and protect the status quo of property owners while not evaluating the potential gains that can happen in society, especially when it comes to environmental initiatives.
He notes the concept of winners and losers of policy decisions is a big theme of University Professor Emeritus Michael Trebilcock鈥檚 groundbreaking research, and an influence on his own. "If the policy losers are powerful enough, have a legitimate claim or feel aggrieved, change won鈥檛 happen,鈥 Lorteau says.
鈥淗ow do you bring environmentalism into a space that is so biased against it in big ways? You need to consider emotions, and the potential losers of a policy transition, to understand what their complaints are.鈥