Climate concerned but anti-nuclear: Exploring (dis)approval of nuclear energy in four European countries

Energy systems across the world must undergo a fundamental transformation towards the use of low-carbon energy sources and technologies in order to reduce global CO2 emissions. While nuclear energy has historically been highly controversial, especially among people concerned about the environment, s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy research & social science 2021-05, Vol.75, p.102008, Article 102008
Hauptverfasser: Sonnberger, Marco, Ruddat, Michael, Arnold, Annika, Scheer, Dirk, Poortinga, Wouter, Böhm, Gisela, Bertoldo, Raquel, Mays, Claire, Pidgeon, Nicholas, Poumadère, Marc, Steentjes, Katharine, Tvinnereim, Endre
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container_issue
container_start_page 102008
container_title Energy research & social science
container_volume 75
creator Sonnberger, Marco
Ruddat, Michael
Arnold, Annika
Scheer, Dirk
Poortinga, Wouter
Böhm, Gisela
Bertoldo, Raquel
Mays, Claire
Pidgeon, Nicholas
Poumadère, Marc
Steentjes, Katharine
Tvinnereim, Endre
description Energy systems across the world must undergo a fundamental transformation towards the use of low-carbon energy sources and technologies in order to reduce global CO2 emissions. While nuclear energy has historically been highly controversial, especially among people concerned about the environment, some voices have begun to suggest that nuclear energy should be reconsidered as an energy source, to help mitigate climate change. In this study we explore the relationship between climate change concern and public perceptions of nuclear energy, using representative survey data (n = 4048) from four key energy-producing European countries (France, Germany, Norway, and the United Kingdom). After constructing a climate-change concern index and applying multiple linear regression models, we find that climate change concern is associated with more negative perceptions of nuclear energy in all four countries. These negative associations remain when we control for political orientation, gender, age, and education. Thus, a stable pattern of disapproval of nuclear energy among people concerned about climate change seems to exist independently of national contexts. This result casts into doubt the prospect that broad public support could rapidly emerge for the use (or the increasing use) of nuclear energy as a means to ensure reduced carbon emissions.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.erss.2021.102008
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subjects Climate change
Cross-national analysis
Environment and Society
Environmental Sciences
Humanities and Social Sciences
Nuclear energy
Psychology
Public perception
Sociology
title Climate concerned but anti-nuclear: Exploring (dis)approval of nuclear energy in four European countries
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