4.7 Article

Climate concern and policy acceptance before and after COVID-19

Journal

ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 199, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2022.107507

Keywords

Climate change; Climate policy; Coronavirus; Policy support; Panel study

Funding

  1. ERC Advanced Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme [741087]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [RSF] [19-18-00262]
  3. Marie Curie IF grant [660089]
  4. Ramon y Cajal Fellowship [RyC-2017-22782]
  5. Federal University of Minas Gerais Visiting Professor program [253/2020]
  6. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, through the Maria de Maeztu programme for Units of Excellence [CEX2019-000940-MEU]
  7. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [660089] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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The study finds that while COVID-19 has led to a decrease in public concern for climate change, acceptance of most climate policies has increased. Adverse health experiences and negative economic experiences, except for unemployment, are unrelated to these changes. Additionally, the study shows that people who believe climate change contributed to the COVID-19 outbreak have higher climate concern and policy acceptance, while higher policy acceptance is associated with a positive opinion of the government's response to the pandemic. Furthermore, citizens have favorable attitudes towards a carbon tax with revenues used to compensate for COVID-19-related expenditures.
It remains unclear how COVID-19 has affected public engagement with the climate crisis. According to the finitepool-of-worry hypothesis, concern about climate change should have decreased after the pandemic, in turn reducing climate-policy acceptance. Here we test these and several other conjectures by using survey data from 1172 Spanish participants who responded before and after the first wave of COVID-19, allowing for both aggregate and within-person analyses. We find that on average climate concern has decreased, while acceptance of most climate policies has increased. At the individual-level, adverse health experiences are unrelated to these changes. The same holds for negative economic experiences, with the exception that unemployment is associated with reduced acceptance of some policies. Complementary to the finite-pool-of-worry test, we examine three additional pandemic-related issues. As we find, (1) higher climate concern and policy acceptance are associated with a belief that climate change contributed to the COVID-19 outbreak; (2) higher policy acceptance is associated with a positive opinion about how the government addressed the COVID-19 crisis; (3) citizens show favorable attitudes to a carbon tax with revenues used to compensate COVID-19-related expenditures. Overall, we conclude there is support for addressing the global climate crisis even during a global health crisis.

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