PMID: 16646438May 2, 2006Paper

American exceptionalism? Similarities and differences in national attitudes toward energy policy and global warming

Environmental Science & Technology
D M ReinerM Odenberger

Abstract

Despite sharp differences in government policy, the views of the U.S. public on energy and global warming are remarkably similar to those in Sweden, Britain, and Japan. Americans do exhibit some differences, placing lower priority on the environment and global warming, and with fewer believing that "global warming has been established as a serious problem and immediate action is necessary". There also remains a small hard core of skeptics (< 10%) who do not believe in the science of climate change and the need for action, a group that is much smaller in the other countries surveyed. The similarities are, however, pervasive. Similar preferences are manifest across a wide range of technology and fuel choices, in support of renewables, in research priorities, in a basic understanding of which technologies produce or reduce carbon dioxide (or misunderstandings in the case of nuclear power), and in willingness to pay for solving global warming.

References


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Citations

May 24, 2011·Environmental Health : a Global Access Science Source·Jan C SemenzaLinda A George
Sep 24, 2011·Ecological Applications : a Publication of the Ecological Society of America·Wade E Winterhalter
Jul 21, 2010·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Karen AkerlofEdward W Maibach
Dec 15, 2010·Risk Analysis : an Official Publication of the Society for Risk Analysis·Michael Greenberg, Heather Barnes Truelove
Jun 22, 2010·Risk Analysis : an Official Publication of the Society for Risk Analysis·Lauren A FleishmanM Granger Morgan
Feb 12, 2013·Twin Research and Human Genetics : the Official Journal of the International Society for Twin Studies·Toby HughesGrant C Townsend
Dec 24, 2019·Heliyon·Pavel TcvetkovSergey Fedoseev
Aug 5, 2010·Environmental Science & Technology·Lasse WallquistMichael Siegrist
Feb 26, 2014·Environmental Science & Technology·Lauren A Fleishman MayerM Granger Morgan

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