Large but diminishing effects of climate action nudges under rising costs.
Sebastian BergerAndreas KilchenmannOliver LenzAxel OckenfelsFrancisco SchlöderAnnika M WyssPublished in: Nature human behaviour (2022)
Behavioural public policy has received broad research attention, particularly in the domain of motivating pro-environmental behaviours. We investigate how far the efficacy of arguably one the most popular behavioural policy tools (green 'default change' nudges) depends on the associated cost. On the basis of a field study involving carbon offsets for over 30,000 flights booked by more than 11,000 airline customers, we show that green defaults have a large effect on voluntary climate action, even when several hundreds of Euros are at stake. The effect fully vanishes only as costs approach approximately €800.