Using behavioral science to make smarter energy policy
by David Roberts
So let's do something about that! Let's take a look at this under-covered solutions piece. I've been saying over and over lately that changing behavior is as important as changing technology. Yet behavioral science is neglected relative to technology R&D. Everyone understands the importance of scaling up wind, solar, and geothermal power, but when was the last time you heard a policymaker or pundit talk about scaling up the practical application of knowledge about how human beings think, interact, and make decisions? In their paper, "Behavior and Energy Policy," Hunt Allcott of MIT and Sendhil Mullainathan of Harvard argue for taking such knowledge seriously:
That last sentence is a bit modest given the numbers Allcott and Mullainathan marshal. They've taken a close look at the results so far from behavioral programs in the field and the results are fairly astonishing. Start with the most basic test: how much does it cost for a given climate solution to eliminate (abate) a metric ton of CO2 emissions? With plug-in hybrid vehicles, that ton costs around $12. With wind power, it's $20. With carbon capture and storage at coal-fired power plants, it's $44. How much does that same ton of CO2 abatement cost using these behavioral programs? -$165. No, that's not a typo. It's a negative sign. As in: $165 worth of profit per ton of carbon pollution reduced. If similar programs were expanded nationwide, Allcott and Mullainathan estimate a net value -- savings minus costs -- of $2,220,000,000 a year. Of course much research and testing remains to be done before it's clear whether these programs perform equally well at scale, but as a first approximation, that's not too shabby. Incidentally, some of the data comes from programs run by Opower, a Virginia-based company that works with utilities to apply behavioral science in a way that delivers energy efficiency. I've mentioned them before, and as it happens, President Obama visited them on Friday. "You can see the future in this company," he said. (Why isn't that a bigger story?) Here's Opower's solution to reducing energy use:
High-tech, huh? Put a chart like that on utility bills and you get about a 2 percent average drop in energy use. And it hardly costs the utilities anything! They already have the data. It's just a different way of presenting information, informed by good social science. As social psychologist (and Opower adviser) Robert Cialdini said when I talked with him, there's more than 50 years of scientific research on this stuff. It just hasn't been communicated broadly or translated into policy. Time to start translating! Allcott and Mullainathan offer three policy recommendations.
Side note: that bill, HR 3247, was sponsored by Washington's own Rep. Brian Baird (D). He got it passed out of House Science and Technology Committee but right-wingers, led by Glenn Beck, pitched a fit, saying it was government mind control. The teabaggers created such a distraction that the bill was subsequently withdrawn. I'm going to chat with Baird about the episode later this week. Moving on:
And finally:
For example: the EPA rates fuel efficiency according to miles per gallon (MPG), which turns out to be misleading in all sorts of ways. (See: "The MPG Illusion.") If it instead reported based on gallons per mile (GPM), it would better inform consumers about the real value of efficiency and thereby lead to better choices. Most importantly, it would cost EPA virtually nothing. It's just a matter of applying knowledge about how people tick. ------ Nerdy addendum When considering interventions, policy-makers usually focus on price, or information about prices. As Allcott and Mullainathan note, this focus derives from the the rational choice theory of traditional economics. (I've harped on that lately too -- here, here, here, and here.) Problem is, behavioral psychology and neuroscience have demonstrated that the rational-choice ideal no longer holds water. John M. Gowdy of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, in "Behavioral Economics and Climate Change Policy," puts it this way:
Much of behavioral economics has been devoted to debunking rational choice theory, but a positive alternative is just beginning to emerge, a kind of unified theory of human behavior that harmonizes research from economics, sociology, anthropology, and psychology. Read Gowdy's fascinating paper for more on that. Some previous posts that touch on all this stuff: Original article available here |
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