13:45 - 15:15
Room: Auditorium #2
Symposium
Chair/s:
Andrea Taylor
Failure to discriminate how long air pollution and carbon dioxide remain in the atmosphere
Rachel Dryden 1, M. Granger Morgan 1, Ann Bostrom 2, Wändi Bruine de Bruin 1, 3
1 Carnegie Mellon University, 15213, Pittsburgh, United States
2 University of Washington, 98195, Seattle, United States
3 University of Leeds, LS6 1AN, Leeds, United Kingdom

The atmospheric residence time of carbon dioxide is hundreds of years, many orders of magnitude longer than that of common air pollution, which is typically hours to a few days. However, randomly selected respondents in a mail survey in Allegheny County, PA, (N = 119) and in a national survey conducted with MTurk (N = 1,013) judged the two to be identical (in decades), considerably overestimating the residence time of air pollution and drastically underestimating that of carbon dioxide. Moreover, while many respondents believe that action is needed today to avoid climate change (regardless of cause), roughly a quarter hold the view that if climate change is real and serious, we will be able stop it in the future when it happens, just as we did with common air pollution. In addition to assessing respondents’ understanding of how long carbon dioxide and common air pollution stay in the atmosphere, we also explore the extent to which people correctly identify causes of climate change and how their beliefs affect support for action. With climate change at the forefront of politics and mainstream media, informing discussions of policy is increasingly important. Confusion about the causes and consequences of climate change, and especially about carbon dioxide's long atmospheric residence time, could have profound implications for sustained support of policies to achieve reductions in carbon dioxide emissions and other greenhouse gases.


Reference:
Mo-S13-TT07-S-005
Session:
Symposium - Public perceptions of climate change and its impacts
Presenter/s:
Ann Bostrom
Presentation type:
Symposium
Room:
Auditorium #2
Chair/s:
Andrea Taylor
Date:
Monday, June 19th
Time:
14:35 - 14:50
Session times:
13:45 - 15:15