Opinions Support Market Solutions to Climate Change

Feb. 23, 2023
3 min read

Americans prefer market-based approaches and consumer choice over incentives, tax policies, and mandates when it comes to fuel and energy policies, according to new research commissioned by the Diesel Technology Forum.

This research, conducted by Heart and Mind Strategies LLC, surveyed a sample of 2,500 Americans around the mid-term elections in November 2022. They included 1,155 voters and 1,345 non-voters.

Opinions on fuel strategies

  • The research asked three questions that yielded the following responses:When it comes to fuel and energy policies, Americans express the strongest support for market-based approaches and consumer choice, with less support for financial incentives and tax policies focused on only new technologies. The highest levels of disapproval were for punitive financial policies, or mandates, against continued use of existing technologies.
  • Regarding the approaches to address climate change, 82 percent of respondents want to make “fuels and technologies we have today work better” and focus on those that are zero emissions. One in five (19 percent) said that they believe that there should be no further investment in fossil fuels or internal combustion engines.
  • A total of 82 percent of respondents disagreed with the statement that “diesel engines are a major part of the problem, and we should move away from them no matter what, even if they are the best choice for a particular use.” Some 83 percent indicated that they see diesel engines continuing to play a role in the future, particularly if they are using renewable fuels.

“Addressing climate change is a growing focus of governments and the private sector alike,” said Allen Schaeffer, executive director, in a statement. “It is important to understand where the American people stand on key issues now being considered in policy approaches to reducing greenhouse gas emissions including mandates, tax policy, incentives, and technology choices.

“It’s clear that Americans favor more of a carrot than a stick approach to setting policy and encouraging new fuels and technologies,” he said. “As for approaches to addressing climate change, the debate is often framed in absolutes and extremes, all or none, electric vs. internal combustion, and which is the best and right approach. The American people have a more practical perspective that values a wide range of solutions and consumer choice. Americans want an inclusive approach, an all-of-the-above strategy, and aren’t comfortable with us only investing in zero carbon emissions technologies.” 

Source: Diesel Techology Forum

About the Author

Rod Sutton

Sutton has served as the editorial lead of Construction Equipment magazine and ConstructionEquipment.com since 2001. 

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