A 27-country test of communicating the scientific consensus on climate change

Open Access
Authors
  • B.T. Rutjens
  • F. van Harreveld
  • F. Stablum
  • B. Akın
  • A. Aldoh ORCID logo
  • J. Bai
  • F. Berglund
  • A. Bratina Zimic
  • M. Broyles
  • A. Catania
  • A. Chen
  • M. Chorzępa
  • E. Farahat
  • J. Götz
  • B. Hoter-Ishay
  • G. Jordan
  • S. Joustra
  • J. Klingebiel
  • Ž. Krajnc
  • A. Krug
  • T.L. Andersen
  • J. Löloff
  • D. Natarajan
  • S. Newman-Oktan
  • E. Niehoff
  • C. Paerels
  • R. Papirmeister
  • S. Peregrina
  • F. Pohl
  • A. Remsö
  • A. Roh
  • B. Rusyidi
  • J. Schmidt
  • M. Shavgulidze
  • V. Vellinho Nardin
  • R. Wang
  • K. Warner
  • M. Wattier
  • C.Y. Wong
  • M. Younssi
  • K. Ruggeri
  • S. van der Linden
Publication date 10-2024
Journal Nature Human Behaviour
Volume | Issue number 8 | 10
Pages (from-to) 1892–1905
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Communicating the scientific consensus that human-caused climate change is real increases climate change beliefs, worry and support for public action in the United States. In this preregistered experiment, we tested two scientific consensus messages, a classic message on the reality of human-caused climate change and an updated message additionally emphasizing scientific agreement that climate change is a crisis. Across online convenience samples from 27 countries (n = 10,527), the classic message substantially reduces misperceptions (d = 0.47, 95% CI (0.41, 0.52)) and slightly increases climate change beliefs (from d = 0.06, 95% CI (0.01, 0.11) to d = 0.10, 95% CI (0.04, 0.15)) and worry (d = 0.05, 95% CI (-0.01, 0.10)) but not support for public action directly. The updated message is equally effective but provides no added value. Both messages are more effective for audiences with lower message familiarity and higher misperceptions, including those with lower trust in climate scientists and right-leaning ideologies. Overall, scientific consensus messaging is an effective, non-polarizing tool for changing misperceptions, beliefs and worry across different audiences.
Document type Article
Note © 2024. The Author(s).
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-024-01928-2
Other links https://www.doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/Z6QUH
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