Title of article
Labeling renewable energies: How the language surrounding biofuels can influence its public acceptance
Author/Authors
Michael A. Cacciatore، نويسنده , , Dietram A. Scheufele، نويسنده , , Bret R. Shaw، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
10
From page
673
To page
682
Abstract
Despite growing interest and investments in biological fuels, little is known of how the public form opinions toward this alternative fuel technology. This study examines public opinion of biofuels by focusing on several factors that can be expected to influence citizensʹ opinions about the issue. First, we tested the results of a framing experiment that was embedded within a public opinion survey. This experiment explored how the public responded to the term “biofuels” as compared to the term “ethanol.” Our results suggest that, overall, respondents tended to react more favorably to the former as opposed to the latter term. Second, we examined the impacts of sociodemographics on public attitudes toward biofuels. We found that while sociodemographics did little to consistently explain attitudes toward biofuels there was clear evidence of ideological influences on attitudes, with self-identifying Democrats showing more positive attitudes overall. Finally, we explored the interaction between political partisanship and our experimental manipulation. We found evidence that our wording manipulation differed based on the political party identification of our respondents, with Democrats fluctuating greatly in their assessments depending upon whether they were asked to evaluate “biofuels” or “ethanol.”
Keywords
Biofuels , Public opinion , Framing
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
975014
Link To Document