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Why the Climate Movement Needs a Green Pope, and a Super Voucher

ROME—On my first visit to Vatican City, before my meeting with Michelangelo, I greeted the Pope via the city’s ubiquitous souvenir stands. I love this stuff. You can try on the “Papa Francisco” kitchen apron and imagine the pontiff’s smile beaming over your Spaghetti Bolognese. Or gently joggle the pate of a Pope Francis bobble-head. Postcards are everywhere, of course. And for €10 you can score the annual “Hot Priests Calendar,” featuring hunky young men of the cloth. In this “G-rated” feature, priests from all over the world help promote the Eternal City and breathe into the Catholic brand a wisp of hipness, to say nothing of hotness.

But back to the Pope. This week Pope Francis released the much anticipated encyclical on the environment and climate change. And there’s a connection between that, the souvenir aprons, and even the hot priests. I’ll leave it to others to examine the language of this compelling and lyrical document. Suffice it to say that, in terms of substance, the edict says nothing we don’t already know. For a generation, experts and activists have hammered the shackles of climate, pollution, and poverty within earshot of anyone willing to hear. What is new—and very exciting—is that now the head of the Roman Catholic Church, an extremely popular and charismatic figure, is calling out this injustice and demanding that world leaders take action.

Psychologists and communications experts refer to figures like Pope Francis as “vouchers”—well-known individuals so liked and respected by others that they can successfully “vouch” for large, complicated ideas and persuade them to take action. All those trinkets at the Vatican souvenir stands, intentionally or not, contribute to this overall effect by transmitting the message that Pope Francis and all those sharp-looking priests are accessible, personable, and, above all trustworthy.

The climate movement desperately needs vouchers of this kind. Environmentalists have spent too much time trying to convince people to care about climate change by just teaching them stuff. If we only knew more about chemistry and atmospheric physics, they suggest, about power curves and the scientific method, we would see that carbon pollution is even more odious than Ebola or the Common Core Curriculum and demand that something be done. But that’s not how people work.

Most people, research confirms, do not evaluate risks on their own. They rely on vouchers to point them in the right direction. On topics that are emotionally charged, emotions and values will help determine whom you trust. One study, which examined respondent’s reaction to information about a controversial vaccine against a sexually transmitted virus, suggested that individuals are more likely to believe scientific medical evidence when the physical appearance of the communicating expert matches their cultural outlook. (People comfortable with social hierarchy like gray-haired men in suits; egalitarians dig beards and denim shirts.)

The challenge with climate change is that the relevant audience is so vast. It is not enough to call upon the local rabbi, family doctor, or school teacher to resonate with community values. The situation demands a spokesperson who is both universally known and universally trusted—a kind of “super voucher.” In today’s splintered media, super vouchers are in very short supply. Most recently, we’ve been making do with people like Bill Nye The Science Guy and the celebrity astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. But who appeals to the non-dweeb?

Pope Francis, who at this early stage is now almost as popular as John Paul II was at his height, may fit that bill. It is true that his encyclical will probably have little effect on anyone, Catholic or otherwise, who has already staked out an ideological position. (Witness the flock of Republican presidential candidates, official and unofficial, backing away from this Pope’s theology.)  But polls show that in the United States and elsewhere there is a big group of undecided folks, people who have not thought seriously about climate change and who are eminently persuadable. Those are the sheep this shepherd is after.

Time will tell if the Church’s “superman Pope” can morph into the planet’s next “super voucher.” But he has the right package. Personable, trustworthy, and able to light up the Twittersphere, this man of the cloth is hot indeed.

See my upcoming article, Culture, Cognition, and Climate, which expands on this topic. 

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Robert Verchick | June 18, 2015

Why the Climate Movement Needs a Green Pope, and a Super Voucher

ROME—On my first visit to Vatican City, before my meeting with Michelangelo, I greeted the Pope via the city’s ubiquitous souvenir stands. I love this stuff. You can try on the “Papa Francisco” kitchen apron and imagine the pontiff’s smile beaming over your Spaghetti Bolognese. Or gently joggle the pate of a Pope Francis bobble-head. […]

Evan Isaacson | June 17, 2015

PA’s Dismal TMDL Report: An Opportunity for Change

We recently explored how Virginia’s progress toward meeting the 2017 interim goal for the Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (Bay TMDL) is mostly the product of decades’ old financial commitments.  So, we might hope to see much of the same from Pennsylvania, a fellow member of the Chesapeake Bay Commission since 1985.  Unfortunately, despite […]

Evan Isaacson | June 17, 2015

Virginia’s Bay TMDL Progress Report: A Complete Picture

This is the second in a series of posts to explore progress in cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay, as reflected in recent data from the Chesapeake Bay Program’s elaborate computer model of the Bay, which accounts for what the states are actually doing to reduce pollution. Read the first post, taking a look at the […]

Erin Kesler | June 16, 2015

CPR’s Glicksman to Testify at House Hearing on Ozone Regulations

This morning CPR Scholar and George Washington University Law School professor Robert Glicksman will testify in support of EPA’s proposed rule to regulate ozone. The Hearing, held by the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommitee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade will focus on the potential impacts of the proposed ozone rule on manufacturing.  Glicksman’s testimony corrects misinformation about […]

Thomas McGarity | June 15, 2015

What to Expect from the Supreme Court’s Clean Air Mercury Decision

In the shadow of the upcoming Supreme Court decisions on Obamacare and same-sex marriage is an important environmental case that has important implications for the health of women of childbearing age in America.  The Court will decide whether to uphold the Environmental Protection Agency’s stringent limitations for emissions of the toxic metal mercury from the […]

Richard Pierce, Jr. | June 10, 2015

Now Is the Time to Implement Real-time Pricing of Electricity

Editor’s Note: This is the second of two posts. Yesterday’s examined the need for a carbon tax as a way to reduce carbon emissions. Real-time pricing of electricity is a logical complement to a carbon tax. Economists are fond of saying:  “First, get the price right.” What they mean is, if we can take the […]

Daniel Farber | June 9, 2015

Clean Air versus States Rights

A sleeper decision by the D.C. Circuit upholds federal air pollution authority. The D.C. Circuit’s decision last week in Mississippi Commission on Environmental Quality v. EPA didn’t get a lot of attention, despite having a very significant constitutional ruling.  Since the constitutional discussion doesn’t start until about page seventy, after many pages of scintillating discussion of matters like […]

Richard Pierce, Jr. | June 9, 2015

Now Is the Time to Implement a Carbon Tax

Editor’s Note: This is the first of two posts on market-based approaches to reducing carbon emissions. Today’s focuses on a carbon tax; tomorrow’s on real-time pricing of electricity. There is a broad consensus among economists that we will not be able to mitigate climate change efficiently and effectively unless we place a price on carbon. […]

Evan Isaacson | June 9, 2015

Maryland Releases Assessment of Future Financing Needs for Bay Restoration

The State of Maryland released a long overdue report on Monday regarding the state’s plan to finance its implementation of the Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (Bay TMDL) requirements.  The report was prepared by the Environmental Finance Center at the University of Maryland on behalf of the Maryland Department of the Environment, the Department […]