AI Article Synopsis

  • Offshore wind power (OWP) has potential for decarbonization, but local acceptance is crucial for site selection, highlighting the need for effective information dissemination.
  • A study designed nudging messages based on kin selection theory to improve public attitudes toward OWP, resulting in a moderate shift in risk-averse attitudes as observed in a survey of over 4,000 responses.
  • The effectiveness of nudging messages varied, particularly among those involved in fisheries, indicating that a multifaceted approach combining different interventions might be more effective than relying solely on nudges.

Article Abstract

Offshore wind power (OWP) is a promising way to achieve decarbonization and tackle global climate change, but acceptance by residents is an important issue for site location. Information provision could be a more cost-effective intervention than debates or subsidies, assuming that scientifically correct information alone is insufficient and information design to boost the message effects considering realistic human responses is necessary. Thus, we designed nudging messages to increase acceptance of OWP, using a message framework to moderate risk-averse attitudes by reminding readers of familial support based on insights from kin selection theory from evolutionary psychology. A randomized controlled trial based on an internet survey of more than 4000 responses from the general public was performed to investigate the message effects. The messages significantly moderated the risk-averse attitudes toward OWP by 0.228 on average on a five-point Likert scale, which meant that about 5 people out of 100 changed their attitudes to be safer by 1 point. This suggests that disseminating flyers using nudging messages might be an effective way to increase acceptance. We also extracted responses from those who mentioned fisheries in an open-ended question as an alternative to actual fishers. Responses from this segment were more complex and the message effects were limited compared with those who did not mention fisheries; although the attitudes toward OWP before receiving the messages were safer, reading descriptions for potential risks on fisheries may have unexpectedly led them to focus on the risks of which they were unaware at first. Because information provision based on nudging is effective but just one of a wide variety of political interventions available, practitioners should consider a combination of multiple options instead of using only nudging messages.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10793903PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0297199PLOS

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