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July 29, 2024

More Aussies are concerned the transition to renewables will hurt them financially

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Support for Australia transitioning to renewable energy is strong across the country (with 59% support), but 41% are concerned about the negative impacts of the transition to green energy on cost-of-living and household energy bills (up 10% since 2022), according to the , unveiled at Sydney's Greenhouse Tech Hub.

The Ipsos study provides new insights on Australians' attitudes towards climate change and the transition to green energy, focusing on priorities and concerns for , and information and understanding around climate change.

The report found that Australians are concerned about the negative impact of the shift to green energy on cost-of-living, which rose by 10 percentage points since 2022, and household energy bills, up 7 percentage points, plus reliability of energy supply, up 11 percentage points. This is despite almost 6 in 10 (59%) Australians supporting the energy transition away from fossil fuels towards renewable energy generation.

The spike in cost-of-living worries has also changed Australians' priorities around the energy transition. Most Australians (59%) now want to see energy prices—up 13% since the same time last year—and energy supply reliability to homes and business (57%) prioritized.

Australian skepticism about national climate change action and information is also high. Half of Australians don't think there are any plans around the energy transition, or that it simply won't happen, while 54% say they don't understand the actions being taken around climate change.

Key findings

There is strong support across Australia for energy transition:

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There is low understanding and skepticism around progress made to date and Australia's ability to meet its net zero targets:

Australians are concerned about the negative impacts of the transition to on cost-of-living and household electricity bills:

Cost of living concerns are shifting priorities for the energy transition:

Understanding of the energy transition and the technology involved is poor:

Alternative narratives are highly believable:

Contentious statements about the transition are believable at least half of Australians:

Australians want to hear more about the energy transition and see more action:

Stuart Clark, Director, Public Affairs at Ipsos Australia, said, "Most Australians are supportive of the energy transition, but there's not a strong belief that it's already underway. The challenge is that the public is generally unaware of the actions being taken and progress already being made towards net zero.

"Australian governments and businesses need to step into the vacuum currently filled with mis- and disinformation, focusing on communicating the positive actions and plans already in the pipeline. People need to understand the plans and the transition needs to feel real.

"The cost-of-living environment is causing many Australians to question the impacts of the energy transition on their households' finances. And that is reducing the appetite for Australia to take a leading role in the global transition."

More information: The Ipsos Climate Change Report.

Provided by IPSOS

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