Working Paper

Correcting Consumer Misperceptions about CO2 Emissions

Taisuke Imai, Davide D. Pace, Peter Schwardmann, Joël van der Weele
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 10138

Policy makers put great emphasis on the role of information about carbon emissions in achieving sustainable decisions by consumers. We conduct two studies to understand the optimal targeting of such information and its effects. First, we conduct an incentivized and representative survey among US consumers (N = 1, 022) to investigate awareness of climate impact and willingness to mitigate it. We find a large variation in the perceptions of the carbon emissions of different consumption behaviors, with an overall tendency to underestimate these emissions. We also find a positive but highly concave willingness to mitigate climate impact. We combine elicited misperceptions and willingness to mitigate in a structural model that delivers sharp predictions about where to best target information campaigns. In an experiment with actual consumption decisions (N = 2, 081), we then test for the effect of CO2 information on the demand for beef, a product predicted to be a productive target for information. Correcting misperceptions has no effect on the demand for beef, both in absolute terms and compared to a predictably less productive target of information, i.e. the demand for poultry. Our dataset allows us to hone in on the underlying reason for this null effect.

CESifo Category
Energy and Climate Economics
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: climate change, carbon emissions, information provision, consumer behavior
JEL Classification: C810, C930, D840, Q540