4.8 Article

Climate change experiences raise environmental concerns and promote Green voting

期刊

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
卷 12, 期 2, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41558-021-01263-8

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资金

  1. IIASA
  2. EPICC (East Africa, Peru, India, Climate Capacities) project part of the International Climate Initiative (IKI)
  3. German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (BMU)
  4. Vienna Institute of Demography/Austrian Academy of Sciences

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The study found that temperature anomalies, heatwaves, and droughts have a significant impact on environmental concerns and voting for Green parties in European regions. The climate effect varies substantially across regions, with cooler Continental or temperate Atlantic climates being more affected. The findings also suggest that experiences of climate change increase public support for climate action, but only under favorable economic conditions.
Exposure to extreme weather events could increase environmental concerns and support for Green parties. With high-resolution data across European countries, the authors demonstrate the existence of such effect, then further discuss the heterogeneity and possible mechanisms. Public support is fundamental in scaling up actions to limit global warming. Here, we analyse how the experience of climate extremes influences people's environmental attitudes and willingness to vote for Green parties in Europe. To this end, we combined high-resolution climatological data with regionally aggregated, harmonized Eurobarometer data (34 countries) and European Parliamentary electoral data (28 countries). Our findings show a significant and sizeable effect of temperature anomalies, heat episodes and dry spells on environmental concern and voting for Green parties. The magnitude of the climate effect differs substantially across European regions. It is stronger in regions with a cooler Continental or temperate Atlantic climate and weaker in regions with a warmer Mediterranean climate. The relationships are moderated by regional income level suggesting that climate change experiences increase public support for climate action but only under favourable economic conditions. The findings have important implications for the current efforts to promote climate action in line with the Paris Agreement.

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