Advertisement Β· 728 Γ— 90

Posts by Shane Timmons

Perceptions of climate change and policy among farmers and the public in Ireland This study investigates how farmers, rural residents, and urban residents compare when it comes to perceptions and understanding of climate change, as well as willingness to make changes in their live...

This thread was mostly an exercise for myself to step back from a report a few days after it came out and to try get more consistent with Bluesky posting, but if anyone's made it this far the full report is here: doi.org/10.26504/rs207

14/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

Some take-homes are:
(1) there's no evidence for an urban-rural divide
(2) the public lack clear guidance on dietary emissions
(3) farmers are broadly onboard but could do with support
(4) a small climate 'resistant' group may drive misperceptions if given disproportionate airtime
13/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

It may instead be driven by a small subgroup who appear resistant to policies and report very low levels of concern about climate change. But we find evidence for people with these views in rural and urban communities too.
12/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

So, given all of this evidence, why might there be a perception that farmers are anti-climate action?

(Some) farmers are indeed less likely to recognise the climate impact of eating meat and are less supportive of restrictive farming policies - but the differences are pretty small.
11/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

So farmers are broadly concerned and supportive of some forms of climate action. Why don't we see more climate-friendly farming practices?

We find considerable scope for improving farmer awareness of these practices, some of which may be easy wins:

10/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

Across a range of climate policies, we also see broadly similar levels of support across the three groups.

(There are some differences for specific policies, with farmers less supportive of reducing the national herd than the public (2.2 vs. 3.5-3.8), but little difference on most).

9/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

Which may be partly driven by the public underestimating how worried farmers are about climate change.
8/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

Almost half of farmers even cite climate change as one of the top issues they face (not sig different to the proportion who cite excessive regulation!)

The public also underestimate how many farmers struggle with negative perceptions of farming.
7/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

When it comes to concern, the distribution of worry in all groups is broadly similar. Though it looks like there may be fewer farmers at the 'extremely worried' end, the differences aren't even close to statistically significant (ps > .78).

(Note the distribution uptick at 1 though!)
6/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

Farmers do substantially worse on the plant-based item, and we have some evidence that this is a form of motivated reasoning -> the difference is driven by beef and dairy farmers.

But it's also worth noting that majorities of all groups are poor on dietary emissions.
5/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Advertisement
Post image

Where we do find a difference is on understanding of what individual actions matter.

Farmers do slightly worse than the public (but again, if anything, the rural-urban divide favours rural).
4/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

We also find no difference in their understanding of what sectors are most responsible for emissions (with no improvement from when we first measured this 3 years ago.)

Concerningly, 1 in 3 farmers and the same proportion of the public don't identify agriculture as one of the big emitters

3/14

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
Post image

We find no reliable differences in knowledge of the effects of climate change between rural residents, urban residents and farmers. (If anything, rural respondents did slightly better!) 2/14

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

Rural communities & especially farmers are often painted as anti-climate action.

This week, we published a report to provide some evidence on this.

The results, based on a survey of the public (n=1200) and almost 500 farmers (recruited at events, door-to-door, etc), are pretty interesting:

🧡

1 year ago 4 3 1 0
Post image

Today, we have published the report 'Perceptions of Climate Change and Policy Among Farmers and the Public in Ireland'.

πŸ’‘ Read the key findings: www.esri.ie/news/farmers...

πŸ“„ Download the full report: www.esri.ie/publications...

1 year ago 1 1 1 0

🀩🀩 Paper finally out in the AER!

With my co-authors (incl. @bluebery-planterose.com & @s-stantcheva.bsky.social) we surveyed climate attitudes in 20 countries covering 72% of global emissions.

In brief, people want ambitious, global, and fair climate policies. A πŸ§΅β¬‡οΈ

www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=...

1 year ago 95 34 2 1
Post image

Today, we have published 'The Response of Low-Income Households to the Cost-of-Living Crisis in Ireland'.

πŸ’‘ Read the key findings: www.esri.ie/news/low-inc...

πŸ“„ Download the full report: www.esri.ie/publications...

1 year ago 3 1 1 0
Post image

Today, @ESRI.ie, the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth (DCEDIY), and @deptjusticeirl.bsky.social have published the Monitoring Report on Integration 2024.

πŸ’‘ Read the key findings: www.esri.ie/news/migrant...

πŸ“„ Download the full report: www.esri.ie/publications...

1 year ago 0 4 1 0
Post image

Today, we have published 'Promoting a nationwide collective response: lessons from the social activity measure during the COVID-19 pandemic.'

πŸ’‘ Read the Research Bulletin: esri.ie/publications...

πŸ“„ Download the full report: esri.ie/publications...

1 year ago 1 2 1 1
Advertisement

Paid internship for final year undergrad/masters students to work on an exciting environmental policy project

1 year ago 2 2 0 0

@isweconomics.bsky.social - if you haven’t already come across this!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
We’re heading for the second biggest fiscal disaster in the history of the State The idea that the Green Party was making us all go too far too fast is the exact opposite of the truth
1 year ago 32 13 2 8
NEW REPORT:
New ESRI research finds high levels of prejudice against Travellers and Roma in Ireland

NEW REPORT: New ESRI research finds high levels of prejudice against Travellers and Roma in Ireland

Today, we publish 'Understanding Attitudes to Travellers and Roma in Ireland'

πŸ’‘ Read more: www.esri.ie/news/new-esri-research-f...

πŸ“„ www.esri.ie/publications/understandi...

1 year ago 7 8 1 0
RESEARCH BULLETIN
How to Encourage Collective Climate Action

RESEARCH BULLETIN How to Encourage Collective Climate Action

Today, we have published a new Research Bulletin titled 'How to Encourage Collective Climate Action' by Lucie Martin, @shanetimmons.bsky.social , and Pete Lunn.

πŸ“„ Download the full research bulletin: www.esri.ie/publications/how-to-enco...

1 year ago 4 2 1 0

Great to showcase the breadth and quality of behavioural research in Ireland at this year’s Econ, Psych & Policy conference @esri.ie - already looking forward to next year!

1 year ago 4 2 0 0
Preview
Setting the scene for harmonised waste-sorting labels in the European Union The provisionally agreed (as of June 2024) packaging and packaging waste regulation requires EU Member States to implement harmonised waste-sorting labels. Applied to both packaging and receptacles, t...

🌱 Our latest JRC Science for Policy Report! 🌱
"Setting the Scene for Harmonised Waste-Sorting Labels in the European Union" outlines key insights to guide EU-wide waste-sorting labels. πŸŒβ™»οΈ
publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/h...

πŸ‘‡ Key findings:

1 year ago 1 2 1 1

And there are some things we have evidence no evidence on: what happens when different groups of people are asked to change in different ways to reach the same goal (e.g. less car use in urban areas and less fossil fuel burning in rural ones).

As usual - more research needed! 9/9

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

- The consequences will be most strongly felt by future generations
- We have an inherent bias toward maintaining the status quo, even when change is beneficial 8/9

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

But climate change comes with unique challenges:
- The problem is "multi-level" - behaviour needs to change at the local level for goals that are set nationally or internationally
- People are often uncertain about what actions make a difference 7/9

1 year ago 2 0 1 0
Advertisement
Post image

We see these mattering not just in the scientific papers but in Irish towns too - the Killarney Coffee Cup Project is a great example and one we highlight in the report. 6/9

1 year ago 1 0 1 0