Obtaining public support for North-South climate funding: Evidence from conjoint experiments in donor countries
•North-South climate funding requires enough public support in donor countries.•We identify support-increasing design elements through conjoint experiments.•No effect on support of recipient countries’ vulnerability, income, emission levels.•Balanced burden, joint decision making, use for mitigation...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Global environmental change 2014-11, Vol.29, p.118-126 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •North-South climate funding requires enough public support in donor countries.•We identify support-increasing design elements through conjoint experiments.•No effect on support of recipient countries’ vulnerability, income, emission levels.•Balanced burden, joint decision making, use for mitigation increase public support.•Pure compensation mechanisms not feasible, need to contribute to global public good.
The adoption of the Warsaw mechanism on loss and damage has again highlighted the North-South divide in those parts of UNFCCC negotiations dealing with international climate finance. Current estimates put required funding from rich countries at 50–100 billion Euros per year to induce non-Annex I countries to take on greenhouse gas limitation commitments and to assist highly vulnerable countries. Results from survey-embedded conjoint experiments can help policy-makers anticipate opportunities and pitfalls in designing large-scale climate funding schemes. We implemented such experiments in the United States and Germany to better understand what institutional design characteristics are likely to garner more public support for climate funding among citizens in key developed countries. We find that climate funding receives more public support if it flows to efficient governments, funding decisions are made jointly by donor and recipient countries, funding is used both for mitigation and adaptation, and other donor countries contribute a large share. Contrary to what one might expect, climate change damage levels, income, and emissions in/of potential recipient countries have no significant effect on public support. These findings suggest that finance mechanisms that focus purely on compensating developing countries, without contributing to the global public good of mitigation, will find it hard to garner public support. |
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ISSN: | 0959-3780 1872-9495 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.08.006 |