A trio of psychologists at the Norwegian Research Center and the University of Bergen’s Norway Center for Climate and Energy Transformation has found via survey that the chief motivating factor that gets people to participate in climate activism is anger. In their study, reported in the journal Global Environmental Change, Thea Gregersen, Gisle Andersen and Endre Tvinnereim, surveyed more than 2,000 Norwegian adults about their feelings regarding climate activism related to slowing climate change.
Prior research has shown that climate change could be slowed, stopped, or even reversed by the cessation of greenhouse gas emissions and implementation of technology that removes greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. Unfortunately, little progress is being made on either front.
In this new study, the researchers sought to better understand why so little is being done to save the planet considering the magnitude of future repercussions. More specifically, they wondered what it takes to motivate people from merely thinking about climate change to actively engaging in activities that might result in pressuring governments and industry to take appropriate action.
The researchers sent a survey to thousands of Norwegian adults, receiving 2,046 responses. The goal of the survey was to determine the motivations for people to engage in climate activism. To that end, the survey asked about whether a respondent engaged in climate activism and what they thought might make them do so if they were not active.
They also asked about specific emotions related to climate activism, such as whether they felt fear about changes to come, anger at their government and others for not enacting laws banning greenhouse gas emissions, or simply hopelessness.
2023-08-26 21:24:02
Link from phys.org