Does learning about climate change adaptation change support for mitigation?

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-1-2015

Abstract

Many have speculated that increased attention to climate change adaptation will reduce support for mitigation. The Risk Compensation Hypothesis suggests that remedies to reduce the impacts of risky behaviors can unintentionally increase those behaviors. The Risk Salience Hypothesis suggests that information about adaptation may increase the salience of impacts, and therefore increase mitigation support. Experiment 1 presented participants with a news article about an irrigation technology described as a way to improve efficiency (Pure Control), reduce emissions (Mitigation Control), or reduce drought vulnerability (Adaptation). Political moderates in the adaptation condition rated climate change as a higher political priority and were more supportive of a policy to subsidize the technology than those in both controls. Results were not replicated in Experiment 2. These results partially support the Risk Salience Hypothesis. There was no evidence to justify the concern that discussing adaptation will reduce support for mitigation or concern about climate change.

Publication Title

Journal of Environmental Psychology

Volume

41

First Page

19

Last Page

29

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1016/j.jenvp.2014.10.009

ISSN

02724944

E-ISSN

15229610

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