| Literature DB >> 35742470 |
Ping Han1,2, Zepeng Tong1,2, Yan Sun1,2, Xuefeng Chen1,2.
Abstract
Global climate change presents a profound threat to the survival and continued development of humanity. The present study featured a survey of 3005 adolescents in China on 13 December 2021, aiming to determine whether climate change beliefs (including recognition of the existence of climate change, cognition of the causes of climate change, and climate change risk perception) influence their engagement in energy-conservation behaviors. Concurrently, the psychological mechanism underlying the influence of environmental concerns on the above relationship was also tested. The results showed that, among youths, climate change belief positively predicts engagement in energy-conservation behaviors. Specifically, awareness of the existence of climate change, knowledge of the causes of climate change, and climate change risk perception all positively predict engagement in energy-conservation behaviors. Further, environmental concerns were found to play a mediating role in the relationship between climate change beliefs and energy-conservation actions. From a practical perspective, the government and education departments should guide young people to develop accurate perceptions of climate change, and should raise their awareness of energy conservation and social responsibility, which should lead to their development of energy-conservation habits.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent; carbon neutrality; climate change; energy-conservation behavior; environmental concern
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35742470 PMCID: PMC9223525 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19127222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the theoretical model.
Means, standard deviations, and correlation coefficients for the study variables.
| Mean Value | Standard Deviation | Energy-Conservation Behavior | Environmental Concerns | Existence | Causes | Risk Perception | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy-conservation behavior | 8.074 | 2.142 | 1 | ||||
| Environmental concerns | 5.783 | 1.525 | 0.172 ** | 1 | |||
| Existence | 8.472 | 2.184 | 0.266 ** | 0.151 ** | 1 | ||
| Causes | 7.389 | 2.285 | 0.164 ** | 0.190 ** | 0.377 ** | 1 | |
| Risk perception | 7.662 | 2.410 | 0.330 ** | 0.119 ** | 0.428 ** | 0.394 ** | 1 |
** At the 0.01 level (two-tailed), the correlation is significant.
Figure 2A mediating model for the effects of environmental concerns and acceptance of the existence of climate change on engagement in energy-conservation behaviors. All coefficients unstandardized.
Figure 3A mediating model for the effects of environmental concerns and knowledge of the causes of climate change on engagement in energy-conservation behaviors. All coefficients unstandardized.
Figure 4A mediating model of the effects of environmental concerns and climate change risk perception on engagement in energy-conservation behaviors. All coefficients unstandardized.
Total effects, direct effects, and mediating effects.
| Energy-Conservation Behavior (Y) | β | 95% Confidence Interval | Proportion (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Total effect | 0.261 | [0.226, 0.295] | |
| Direct effect | 0.241 | [0.206, 0.275] | 92.33 |
| Mediating effects of environmental concerns | 0.02 | [0.012, 0.029] | 7.67 |
|
| |||
| Total effect | 0.155 | [0.120, 0.188] | |
| Direct effect | 0.128 | [0.094, 0.162] | 82.58 |
| Mediating effects of environmental concerns | 0.027 | [0.017, 0.390] | 17.42 |
|
| |||
| Total effect | 0.294 | [0.262, 0.324] | |
| Direct effect | 0.279 | [0.248, 0.309] | 94.89 |
| Mediating effects of environmental concerns | 0.016 | [0.008, 0.025] | 5.44 |