People don't think the price of 'saving the climate' is worth the price of dinner for two

From the “just wait until they hear about Al Gore’s 24 hour demand for a carbon tax” department comes this story from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology

dinner_at_the_beach

People don’t put a high value on climate protection

Without further incentives selfish behaviour will continue to dominate

People are bad at getting a grip on collective risks. Climate change is a good example of this: the annual climate summits have so far not led to specific measures. The reason for this is that people attach greater value to an immediate material reward than to investing in future quality of life. Therefore, cooperative behaviour in climate protection must be more strongly associated with short-term incentives such as rewards or being held in high esteem.

Would you rather have €40 (about $55 USD) or save the climate?

When the question is put in such stark terms, the common sense answer is obviously: “stop climate change!” After all, we are well-informed individuals who act for the common good and, more particularly, for the good of future generations. Or at least that’s how we like to think of ourselves.

Unfortunately, the reality is rather different. Immediate rewards make our brains rejoice and when such a reward beckons we’re happy to behave cooperatively. But if achieving a common goal won’t be rewarded until a few weeks have gone by, we are rather less euphoric and less cooperative. And if, instead of money, we’re offered the prospect of a benefit for future generations, our enthusiasm for fair play wanes still further.

An international team of researchers led by Manfred Milinski from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology has shown how poorly we manage collective risk. “Our experiment is based on an essay which Thomas Schelling, the Nobel laureate in economics, wrote back in 1995”, explains Milinski. Schelling pointed out that it was today’s generation which would have to make the efforts for climate protection, while it would be future generations who would gain the benefits. So the people of the present have little motivation actually to do anything. Does this gloomy theory withstand experimental scrutiny?

To find out, the researchers had to convert this problem into a simple experimental situation. They had the participants play a modified public goods game. Such games are very common in behavioural economics and always follow the same pattern. The participants receive a certain amount of money and are invited to donate a proportion of it over a number of rounds. The donated money is doubled and this amount is divided equally between the players. Anything which was not donated goes directly in the player’s pocket. The most profitable behaviour in such games is to donate nothing at all and simply benefit from the altruism of the other players.

The researchers modified the rules to incorporate averting impending climate change into the game. Each player received a starting fund of €40 and, playing over ten rounds, was able to decide how much of it to keep or donate. The donated money was invested in a climate change advertising campaign and was thus a simulated investment in climate protection. There were also bonus payments: those groups which donated more than half of their total fund were symbolically able to avoid dangerous climate change and were paid an additional €45 per participant. If the group donated less, all the players had a 90% probability of losing their endowment.

Three scenarios were devised to model the fact that the benefits of saving the climate are only felt in the future. Players from successful groups were paid their endowment either on the day after the experiment (scenario 1) or seven weeks later (scenario 2). In scenario 3, the endowment was not paid out to the players at all, but was instead invested in planting oak trees and thereby in climate protection. Over their lifetime, the trees will absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and their wood will be a valuable building material for future generations.

However, not one of the eleven groups which was offered the prospect of planting oak trees achieved the donation target. On average, just €57 were paid into the climate account instead the objective of €120. That’s less than half of the target amount. In the first scenario, seven out of ten groups were successful, the participants donating on average €108, while the players in the second scenario still donated €83 (four out of ten groups were successful). “The result of our experiment paints a gloomy picture of the future”, summarises Milinski. “We were unfortunately able to confirm Schelling’s prediction – it’s a disaster.”

Climate change is the largest public goods game that has ever been played and the whole of humanity are its players. The problem is that while we are now making the payments, the fruits of our efforts will only be enjoyed very much later and they will be shared among the whole of humanity. We ourselves or our children will thus benefit only very slightly from any restrictions we place on our lives today and our motivation actually to do something is correspondingly low.

These results make it clear that if people are to invest in climate protection, they must have short-term incentives to do so. “It’s not enough simply to point to the benefits future generations will enjoy”, says Jochem Marotzke from the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, one of the authors of the study. “Climate protection will only be effective if the people making the effort will also be able to obtain a short-term material benefit from doing so, for instance by exporting climate-friendly technology.”

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85 Comments
October 24, 2013 8:32 am

The rational approach would be to say screw the future. Those guys have space ships, ray guns and weather modification machines. Let them fix the planet themselves. I’m not giving them my money.

Box of Rocks
October 24, 2013 8:56 am

Downdraft says:
October 23, 2013 at 5:12 pm
If you live in the U.S., you already spent over $250 on climate change, so you paid your indulgence already. Now you can sit back, relax, and wait for the earth to cool. No more worries.
Ah, but if I pay more can I make more beer to drink????

October 24, 2013 8:58 am

Jquip on October 23, 2013 at 4:49 pm said,

John Whitman said: “But, my focus is only that the most fundamental premise of the Planck Institute’s lifeboat meme (see my previous comment) is false. ”

The only fundamental premise I see is: “Schelling pointed out that it was today’s generation which would have to make the efforts for climate protection, while it would be future generations who would gain the benefits. So the people of the present have little motivation actually to do anything.”
. . .”

– – – – – – – –
Jquip,
It is nice to further engage. Thanks.
I see the situation this way. The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology (MPIEB) endorses / inherits in its research, per the WUWT post above with its links, the IPCC centric false ‘a priori’ premise that burning fossil fuels must be a fundamental net harm to the Earth System of which humans are an integral part. If you agree that the IPCC has that premise, then the MPIEB has it too . . . why else are they (MPIEB) discussing the topic of a need to focus on climate change impact and mitigation?
Since the MPIEB inherits the IPCC false premise then they are postulating, as is the IPCC, that we are in the morality fable called the ‘lifeboat meme’. We are in the same old situation we have been since the start of human civilization; not in the lifeboat meme / fable.
I hope that clarifies what I had previously said.
NOTE: I am late responding to you because game 1 of the MLB World Series and an associated cocktail party intervened. The team I am supporting lost game 1. : (
John

accordionsrule
October 24, 2013 3:37 pm

I guess us humans have always been selfish, selfish selfish, because I never saw this headline:
July 4,1880: Today the Federal Government announced the nation-wide prohibition of horses larger than shetland ponies. Carbon pollution from each pony is limited to less than 15 pounds per day, yearly reducing by 2 pounds per day until the sustainable target of 1 pound per day is achieved.
The President said that although the new strict standards may cause America’s thriving economy to come to a standstill, nothing short of drastic, immediate action will avert impending doom. “If we continue business as usual, by the year 1980 horse manure will reach the third story windows of our major cities. Our children and grandchildren will thank us for this great sacrifice.”

Janice Moore
October 24, 2013 7:45 pm

“… prospect of a benefit for future generations () by … borrowing (given we currently owe about $17T in debt) … and putting the bill on future generations for the gift we are giving them now ()… .” (Mario Lento at 11:44pm 10/23/13) Well said. Precisely. (and, thanks for your affirmation, much appreciated)
“… rational approach would be to say screw the future. Those guys have space ships, ray guns and weather modification machines. … .” (John G. at 8:32am 10/24/13) Great insight. Emminently rational.

Janice Moore
October 24, 2013 7:49 pm

Accordians Rule — excellent analogy.
…. say …… is that a polka I hear ?…. #(:))

October 24, 2013 8:32 pm

John whitman….. my team lost game 2.

Vince Causey
October 25, 2013 9:12 am

Future generations – what have they ever done for us?

Vince Causey
October 25, 2013 9:22 am

Future generations – what are they going to say about us?
“Our forbears squandered trillions of investment capital to no ends save to make their own economies less efficient – a landscape scarred with useless wind farms being a case in point – and thereby pissing away our inheritance. Oh the bloody hypocrites, whilst they themselves enjoying the full fruits that their forebears left to them.”
But, it doesn’t have to be like that.

Kaboom
October 25, 2013 10:40 am

Could i get a bucket of water poured out over Michael Mann instead of the $40? That’s a deal I’d be interested in.