https://www.cambridge.org/engage/coe/article-details/6714ba7912ff75c3a1f41eeb

*Authors*
Beatrice Magistro, Ramit Debnath, Paul O. Wennberg, R. Michael Alvarez

*24 October 2024*

D O I: 10.33774/coe-2024-58hpj

*Abstract*
The discourse on solar geoengineering (SG) is evolving, yet public
perceptions of SG as a climate change solution remain underexplored,
especially in the context of today's political polarization in the United
States. We examine how different SG narratives—framed as complementary,
substitutive, or posing a moral hazard—interact with partisan information
sources to shape public attitudes. Using a conjoint experiment with 2,000
American voters, we find that partisan alignment with the information
source strongly influences trust in the messenger and support for SG,
overshadowing any impact of message framing. When co-partisan sources
present information, both Democrats and Republicans are more likely to
trust the communicator and support SG. Despite these partisan influences,
policy preferences remain consistent with ideological baselines. These
findings highlight the importance of political identity in shaping
perceptions of emerging climate technologies like SG, even in contexts of
low public awareness.

*Source: Social Science Research Method*

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