Both conservatives and liberals want a green energy future, but for different reasons

Wind turbines in the first rays of sunlight at the Saddleback Ridge Wind Project in Carthage, Maine, March 20, 2019. AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

Deidra Miniard, Indiana University; Joe Kantenbacher, Indiana University, and Shahzeen Attari, Indiana University

Political divisions are a growing fixture in the United States today, whether the topic is marriage across party lines, responding to climate change or concern about coronavirus exposure. Especially in a presidential election year, the vast divide between conservatives and liberals often feels nearly impossible to bridge.

Our research examines what people know about the energy sources in use today in the United States, and what types of energy they would like to see the nation using in 2050. Energy connects to many important issues, including climate change, jobs and economic growth, equity and social justice, and international relations. It would be easy to assume that America’s energy future is a highly polarized topic, especially when the Trump administration is clashing with many states led by Democrats over energy policies.

However, in a nationwide online survey, we recently found that broad support exists across the political spectrum for a future powered mostly by renewable energy sources. Our work highlights a consensus around the idea that the United States needs to move its entire energy system away from fossil fuels to low-carbon energy sources.

Assessing perceptions

To explore people’s views on energy sources, we conducted an online survey of 2,429 adults across the U.S. Our participants represented a range of political ideologies, with 51% self-identifying as liberals, 20% as moderate and 29% as conservative. To investigate patterns in the data, we analyzed responses based on participants’ political ideologies.

Our survey asked people to estimate the shares that various energy sources contributed to all energy use in the United States, including activities like generating electricity, running factories, heating homes and powering vehicles. We asked participants to estimate what percentage of U.S. total energy used came from nine energy sources: coal, oil, natural gas, solar, wind, hydro, biomass, geothermal and nuclear power.

Next we had participants describe what they viewed as an optimal mix of these nine energy sources that they hoped the U.S. would use in the year 2050. We also asked what kinds of policies they would support to move the nation from its current status to the future that they envisioned. In a follow-on study, we are examining how factors such as cost and environmental impact influence people’s preferences for one energy source versus others.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has called on world governments to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050 in order to slow climate change – a goal that may not motivate conservative Americans.

Estimations of today’s energy mix

We found that our respondents had some misperceptions about where energy in the U.S. comes from. They tended to underestimate U.S. reliance on oil and natural gas and overestimate coal’s contribution. We believe Americans may not realize how dramatically electric utilities have switched from coal to gas for power generation over the past decade, and may therefore have dated impressions of coal’s prevalence.

Conversely, we found that participants overestimated the contribution of lesser-used energy sources – specifically, renewables like wind and solar power. This pattern may partially be explained by people’s general tendency to inflate estimates of small values and probabilities, which has been seen in areas ranging from household energy use and water use to risk of death.

In the case of the U.S. energy system, this bias means that people think our current energy system is greener than it really is, which could reduce the perceived urgency of shifting to lower-carbon sources.

Shared goals, divergent pathways

When we asked participants to indicate the amount of each energy source they hoped the U.S. would use in 2050, the broad consensus favored a future in which the nation primarily relied on renewable energy and used much less fossil fuel. Conservatives, moderates and liberals shared this outlook.

Particular preferences for a lower-carbon future varied somewhat by political ideology, but on average all groups supported an energy mix in which at least 77% of overall energy use came from low-carbon energy sources, including renewable fuels and nuclear power.

This bipartisan consensus wavered, though, when we asked participants whether they supported or opposed 12 energy policies – six that would lead to larger roles for low-carbon energy sources, and six that would increase use of fossil fuels.

Liberal participants showed strong support for policies consistent with increased use of low-carbon energy sources, such as providing government funding for renewable energy and subsidies for purchasing electric vehicles. They strongly opposed actions that would increase reliance on fossil fuels, such as relaxing oil drilling regulations or lowering fuel economy standards.

On average, conservative participants supported several policies that favored low-carbon energy use, though not as strongly as their liberal counterparts. Conservatives tended to be closer to neutral or only slightly opposed to policies that promote fossil fuel use.

The sharpest contrast between the two political groups was over building and completing pipelines to move oil from extraction points to refineries in the U.S. Several proposed pipelines have generated intense controversy in the past years. Conservatives generally supported pipeline development, and liberals generally opposed it.

Achieving a low-carbon future

An important argument for transitioning to low-carbon energy sources is to limit climate change to manageable levels. Recent polls show that climate change remains a politically divisive issue, with far more Democrats than Republicans rating it as extremely important to their vote in the 2020 presidential race.

Recent research has shown that both Democrats and Republicans strongly support renewable energy development, but do so for different reasons. Democrats prioritize curbing climate change, while Republicans are more motivated by reducing energy costs. We see these motivations playing out in the real world, where conservative oil-producing states like Texas are experiencing huge booms in renewable energy generation, driven primarily by the improving economics of renewable energy.

Realizing the shared vision of an energy system dominated by renewable energy will mean reconciling partisan differences over how to achieve that future. While there is no single rationale that will convince all Americans to support a transition to low-carbon energy sources, our results are encouraging because we find consensus on the U.S. energy future – everyone agrees that it should be green.

[Insight, in your inbox each day. You can get it with The Conversation’s email newsletter.]

Deidra Miniard, PhD Student in Environmental Science, Indiana University; Joe Kantenbacher, Research Associate in Environmental Science, Indiana University, and Shahzeen Attari, Associate Professor of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Bruce Cobb
May 29, 2020 10:46 am

Their “survey” is meaningless, and likely designed to elicit the responses they wanted. If they told them the truth about “green” energy, the responses would have been far, far different.

May 29, 2020 11:27 am

I don’t care what you believe; what are you willing to work for?

– Saul Alinsky

The adaptation of this in terms of renewable energy would be:

I don’t care what you want; what are you willing to pay for?

Physical and engineering realities pay no attention to public opinion polls and can’t be changed by legislation.

To begin with, if you believe with Paul Ehrlich that “Giving society cheap, abundant energy would be the equivalent of giving an idiot child a machine gun”, then we can’t debate about the means of energy production because we fundamentally disagree over its value. I believe anyone whose goal is to make energy expensive and scarce for everyone is completely ignorant of history and not thinking rationally. Debating such people on the merits and drawbacks of renewable energy is futile because they are living in an alternate value universe. Similarly, including them in public opinion polls on energy issues simply pollutes the data.

But assuming we share the goal of abundant, reliable and affordable energy for everyone, then we have to consider both the costs and benefits of all the available technologies.

Which brings us back to “I don’t care what you want; what are you willing to pay for?”

David Hoopman
May 29, 2020 11:29 am

It’s pretty much a given that these “researchers” would have to be spectacularly incompetent to not get the responses they were looking for.

Dave
May 29, 2020 11:43 am

Nukes, Baby, Nukes! A lot of them, and soon!

Mickey Reno
May 29, 2020 6:00 pm

Even Republicans love green energy? Really? If you’re a lefty, and that’s your story, I understand why you’re sticking to it.

I fully admit that most people who are not paying attention and therefore know nothing, might think that solar and wind energy are wonderful and free. I further admit that some of these ignorami (is that the proper plural for ignoramus?) might even believe that renewable energy creates net positive green jobs, as opposed to exacting an opportunity cost in which real and substantial and productive jobs are lost to inefficiency and thrash related to low density, intermittent energy.

That’s why it’s our responsibility to educate these people, to set them straight, to show them that wind mills and solar panels are more about virtue signaling and political correctness and herd mentality than they are about economic advance and sensible energy policy. And to be sure, I make no absolute claims, here. Some rooftop solar might make economic sense if it helps incrementally generate electricity at peak production times, when air conditioning is driving the peak when the sun is shining. But in places where peaks are reached in the late afternoon and early evening hours, solar isn’t going to really help that much. And if solar and wind can drive some pumped hydro production, that might help at micro scales, but pumped hydro would eat so much land, more than we have available, it is completely impractical to use as a large scale replacement of coal, gas and nuclear power. For now, lower emission natural gas makes perfect economic sense. Nuclear power will make the most sense in the far future, after we get over our silly 100% perfection based aversions.

Patrick MJD
May 29, 2020 11:16 pm

I, as well as many who have never had power, want cheap and reliable power. We can do this “cleanly” without solar and wind (Although solar and wind do have their place in the power supply mix). Nuclear. But I do prefer to cook on gas, hate electric hobs/stoves/cooktops.

I mean, how else are we to receive our minute by minute propaganda, sorry, I mean “News”?

Johann Wundersamer
June 1, 2020 2:37 am

However, in a nationwide online survey, we recently found that broad support exists across the political spectrum for a future powered mostly by renewable energy sources –>

However, [ ] broad [ support; lip service ] exists across the political spectrum for a future powered mostly by renewable energy sources

when said “political spectrum” disappears for 2 weeks into the home constituency to push their ever personal reelection.

Johann Wundersamer
June 1, 2020 3:07 am

The same old fallacy:

Assessing perceptions

to explore people’s views on energy sources, [we] they conducted an online survey of 2,429 adults across the U.S.

broadcasted in the limelights of on-looking camera teams.
____________________________________

Rather than intercepting families in the parking lots in front of shopping malls for their consumer habits …

Johann Wundersamer
June 1, 2020 3:25 am

The same old fallacy:

Assessing perceptions

to explore people’s views on energy sources, [we] they conducted an online survey of 2,429 adults across the U.S.

broadcasted in the limelights of on-looking camera teams.
____________________________________

Rather than intercepting families’ shopping trolleys

in the parking lots in front of shopping malls for their consumer habits …

https://www.google.com/search?q=families%27+shopping+trolleys&oq=families%27+shopping+trolleys&aqs=chrome.

Johann Wundersamer
June 1, 2020 3:55 am

No “break of civil rights” –

– with entering shopping malls everyone accepts surveillance cameras outside businesses due to personal security reasons + freedom of trade.

https://www.google.com/search?q=surveillance+cameras+outside+shopping+malls&oq=surveillance+cameras+outside+shopping+malls+&aqs=chrome.

After all – it’s the 20ᵗʰ millennium.