Curbing Carbon: An Experiment on Uncertainty and Information About CO 2 Emissions

Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper 2020-059/I

45 Pages Posted: 4 Nov 2020

See all articles by Davide Pace

Davide Pace

University of Amsterdam - Center for Experimental Economics and Political Decision Making (CREED)

Joel J. van der Weele

University of Amsterdam - Center for Experimental Economics and political Decision making (CREED); Tinbergen Institute; Center for Financial Studies (CFS)

Date Written: September 10, 2020

Abstract

We investigate how consumers respond to uncertainty about CO2 emission size. In an incentivized online experiment, participants can acquire a valuable good that emits an unknown amount of CO2. We find that beliefs about emission size are strongly predictive of purchases, even exceeding the effect of substantial changes in the price of the good. Moreover, information that makes beliefs more precise causes a 26% reduction in overall emissions, even though average beliefs are unchanged. The reduction occurs as the marginal willingness to pay for emission reduction declines with emission size, so people who are too optimistic about emissions are more responsive to information. We also test for the formation of self-serving beliefs. Contrary to theories of motivated reasoning, increasing the surplus from buying the product does not change patterns of attention or belief formation about emissions. Overall, the results suggest that information about CO2 impact can be an important policy lever, and that willingness-to-pay for emission reductions should take into account the size of emissions.

Keywords: Emissions, Sustainable Consumption, Economic Experiments

JEL Classification: Q54, C91, D81

Suggested Citation

Pace, Davide and van der Weele, Joel J., Curbing Carbon: An Experiment on Uncertainty and Information About CO 2 Emissions (September 10, 2020). Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper 2020-059/I, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3693235 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3693235

Davide Pace (Contact Author)

University of Amsterdam - Center for Experimental Economics and Political Decision Making (CREED) ( email )

Netherlands

Joel J. Van der Weele

University of Amsterdam - Center for Experimental Economics and political Decision making (CREED) ( email )

Roetersstraat 11
Amsterdam, 1018 WB
Netherlands

HOME PAGE: http://https://sites.google.com/site/joelvdweele/

Tinbergen Institute ( email )

Burg. Oudlaan 50
Rotterdam, 3062 PA
Netherlands

Center for Financial Studies (CFS) ( email )

Grüneburgplatz 1
Frankfurt am Main, 60323
Germany

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