Human health as a motivator for climate change mitigation: results from four European high income countries

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Human health as a motivator for climate change mitigation: results from four European high income countries. / Amelung, Dorothee; Fischer, Helene; Hermann, Alina; Aall, Carlo; Louis, Valerie; Becher, Heiko; Wilkinson, Paul; Sauerborn, R.

In: GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG, 2019.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

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APA

Amelung, D., Fischer, H., Hermann, A., Aall, C., Louis, V., Becher, H., Wilkinson, P., & Sauerborn, R. (2019). Human health as a motivator for climate change mitigation: results from four European high income countries. GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG, [57]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.05.002

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Bibtex

@article{884b3cf6bf3b4e048e265153dc921c5c,
title = "Human health as a motivator for climate change mitigation: results from four European high income countries",
abstract = "Invoking health benefits to promote climate-friendly household behavior has three unique advantages: (i) health co-benefits accrue directly to the acting individual, they are {"}private goods{"} rather than public ones; (ii) the evidence base for, and magnitude of health co-benefits is well-established; and (iii) the idea of a healthy life-style is well-engrained in public discourse, much more so than that of a climate-friendly life-style. In previous research, assessing the influence of information on health effects on people{\textquoteright}s motivation to adopt mitigation actions, health co-benefits for the individual were typically confounded with collective health co-benefits, for example from pollution reduction. The present research aims to overcome this limitation by providing information on individual health co-benefits that are unconditional on the actions of others (direct health co-benefits). We report effects of this kind of health information on stated willingness to adopt mitigation actions as well as on simulation-based carbon emission reductions in a pre-registered experimental setting among 308 households in 4 mid-size case-studycities in 4 European high-income countries: France, Germany, Norway and Sweden. For each mitigation action from the sectors food, housing, and mobility, half of the sample received the amount of CO2equivalents (CO2-eq) saved and the financial costs or savings the respective action generated. The other half additionally received information on direct health co-benefits, where applicable. For households receiving information on direct health co-benefits, we find a higher mean willingness to adopt food and housing actions, and a greater proportion very willing to adopt one or more mitigation actions (OR 1.86, 95% CI 1.1, 3.12); and a greater simulated reduction in overall carbon footprint: difference in percent reduction -2.70%, (95% CI -5.34, -0.04) overall and -4.45%, (95% CI -8.26, -0.64) for food. Our study is the first to show that providing information on strictly unconditional, individual health co-benefits can motivate households in high-income countries to adopt mitigation actions.",
author = "Dorothee Amelung and Helene Fischer and Alina Hermann and Carlo Aall and Valerie Louis and Heiko Becher and Paul Wilkinson and R Sauerborn",
year = "2019",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.05.002",
language = "Deutsch",
journal = "GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG",
issn = "0959-3780",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Human health as a motivator for climate change mitigation: results from four European high income countries

AU - Amelung, Dorothee

AU - Fischer, Helene

AU - Hermann, Alina

AU - Aall, Carlo

AU - Louis, Valerie

AU - Becher, Heiko

AU - Wilkinson, Paul

AU - Sauerborn, R

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Invoking health benefits to promote climate-friendly household behavior has three unique advantages: (i) health co-benefits accrue directly to the acting individual, they are "private goods" rather than public ones; (ii) the evidence base for, and magnitude of health co-benefits is well-established; and (iii) the idea of a healthy life-style is well-engrained in public discourse, much more so than that of a climate-friendly life-style. In previous research, assessing the influence of information on health effects on people’s motivation to adopt mitigation actions, health co-benefits for the individual were typically confounded with collective health co-benefits, for example from pollution reduction. The present research aims to overcome this limitation by providing information on individual health co-benefits that are unconditional on the actions of others (direct health co-benefits). We report effects of this kind of health information on stated willingness to adopt mitigation actions as well as on simulation-based carbon emission reductions in a pre-registered experimental setting among 308 households in 4 mid-size case-studycities in 4 European high-income countries: France, Germany, Norway and Sweden. For each mitigation action from the sectors food, housing, and mobility, half of the sample received the amount of CO2equivalents (CO2-eq) saved and the financial costs or savings the respective action generated. The other half additionally received information on direct health co-benefits, where applicable. For households receiving information on direct health co-benefits, we find a higher mean willingness to adopt food and housing actions, and a greater proportion very willing to adopt one or more mitigation actions (OR 1.86, 95% CI 1.1, 3.12); and a greater simulated reduction in overall carbon footprint: difference in percent reduction -2.70%, (95% CI -5.34, -0.04) overall and -4.45%, (95% CI -8.26, -0.64) for food. Our study is the first to show that providing information on strictly unconditional, individual health co-benefits can motivate households in high-income countries to adopt mitigation actions.

AB - Invoking health benefits to promote climate-friendly household behavior has three unique advantages: (i) health co-benefits accrue directly to the acting individual, they are "private goods" rather than public ones; (ii) the evidence base for, and magnitude of health co-benefits is well-established; and (iii) the idea of a healthy life-style is well-engrained in public discourse, much more so than that of a climate-friendly life-style. In previous research, assessing the influence of information on health effects on people’s motivation to adopt mitigation actions, health co-benefits for the individual were typically confounded with collective health co-benefits, for example from pollution reduction. The present research aims to overcome this limitation by providing information on individual health co-benefits that are unconditional on the actions of others (direct health co-benefits). We report effects of this kind of health information on stated willingness to adopt mitigation actions as well as on simulation-based carbon emission reductions in a pre-registered experimental setting among 308 households in 4 mid-size case-studycities in 4 European high-income countries: France, Germany, Norway and Sweden. For each mitigation action from the sectors food, housing, and mobility, half of the sample received the amount of CO2equivalents (CO2-eq) saved and the financial costs or savings the respective action generated. The other half additionally received information on direct health co-benefits, where applicable. For households receiving information on direct health co-benefits, we find a higher mean willingness to adopt food and housing actions, and a greater proportion very willing to adopt one or more mitigation actions (OR 1.86, 95% CI 1.1, 3.12); and a greater simulated reduction in overall carbon footprint: difference in percent reduction -2.70%, (95% CI -5.34, -0.04) overall and -4.45%, (95% CI -8.26, -0.64) for food. Our study is the first to show that providing information on strictly unconditional, individual health co-benefits can motivate households in high-income countries to adopt mitigation actions.

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.05.002

DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.05.002

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

JO - GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG

JF - GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG

SN - 0959-3780

M1 - 57

ER -