The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior

Despite widespread belief in anthropogenic climate change and high levels of concern about its consequences, behavioral changes necessary to adequately address climate change appear difficult to achieve. This concern–behavior gap is often explained by the public goods character of climate change mit...

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Main Author: Christiane Lübke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5575
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spelling doaj-1a1b551e7ac14d8981e97c14c68dfd242021-06-01T00:13:55ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-05-01135575557510.3390/su13105575The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation BehaviorChristiane Lübke0Institute of Sociology, University of Duisburg-Essen, 47057 Duisburg, GermanyDespite widespread belief in anthropogenic climate change and high levels of concern about its consequences, behavioral changes necessary to adequately address climate change appear difficult to achieve. This concern–behavior gap is often explained by the public goods character of climate change mitigation, which is associated with a high individual incentive to take a free ride when possible. This paper examines cooperation beliefs and their impact on individuals’ energy conservation behavior. Analyzing data from the European Social Survey, it appears that cooperation beliefs are rather low in Europe and that most people do not expect others to limit their energy use to help mitigate climate change. This low trust contrasts with individuals’ reported level of energy conservation behavior and the general high level of energy conservation in most European countries. This trust gap has important implications for pro-environmental behavior as high trust in others’ pro-environmental behavior fosters individuals’ attempts to save energy.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5575climate change mitigationdescriptive social normsenergy-savingpro-environmental behavior changefree-ridersocial dilemma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christiane Lübke
spellingShingle Christiane Lübke
The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior
Sustainability
climate change mitigation
descriptive social norms
energy-saving
pro-environmental behavior change
free-rider
social dilemma
author_facet Christiane Lübke
author_sort Christiane Lübke
title The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior
title_short The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior
title_full The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior
title_fullStr The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior
title_full_unstemmed The Climate Change Dilemma: How Cooperation Beliefs Influence Energy Conservation Behavior
title_sort climate change dilemma: how cooperation beliefs influence energy conservation behavior
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Despite widespread belief in anthropogenic climate change and high levels of concern about its consequences, behavioral changes necessary to adequately address climate change appear difficult to achieve. This concern–behavior gap is often explained by the public goods character of climate change mitigation, which is associated with a high individual incentive to take a free ride when possible. This paper examines cooperation beliefs and their impact on individuals’ energy conservation behavior. Analyzing data from the European Social Survey, it appears that cooperation beliefs are rather low in Europe and that most people do not expect others to limit their energy use to help mitigate climate change. This low trust contrasts with individuals’ reported level of energy conservation behavior and the general high level of energy conservation in most European countries. This trust gap has important implications for pro-environmental behavior as high trust in others’ pro-environmental behavior fosters individuals’ attempts to save energy.
topic climate change mitigation
descriptive social norms
energy-saving
pro-environmental behavior change
free-rider
social dilemma
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5575
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