10 Recommendations on How to Campaign on Energy When Everybody Is Thinking about War
Mindworks Lab
An innovation lab giving changemakers the power to understand how the human mind works.
We propose ten recommendations for campaigners to strengthen their energy advocacy in Europe. These are rooted in?four future scenarios?of how public perceptions and mindsets around European energy independence could evolve in the coming months. We suggest specific strategic approaches, narrative framing and tactics that could be helpful for a just, green, and solidary transition.
The time is now. While environmental groups are exposing?the costs of Russian oil?and the European Commission is?promoting individual energy savings, the French far-right insists that?the people’s purchasing power on energy is a core right, and countries are pledging to?let coal?nuclear power?stay longer.
The?Overton window?of opportunity to create solidarity around reductionism and energy independence a norm is slowly closing down.
The Four Mindset Scenarios for European Energy Future | ? Illustrated by Hsun Ya Tsai for Mindworks, 2022.
Opportunities: What to Focus on?
Just the Right Size of Challenge
In contrast to a general carbon emission reduction, phasing out Russian fossil fuels is a big enough task to be a relevant contribution while still being tangible enough to build a coherent action plan with short term milestones. It is also much easier to communicate as an ask.
Energy-saving, efficiency and sufficiency
The most significant opportunity is to create advances in energy-saving and demand reduction in Europe. Every analytical report or plan on energy independence emphasises that it is impossible to achieve without savings and reduction. Europe will only become energy independent if its citizens, businesses, and governments work together to support collective actions and new social norms, pass new legislation, and encourage purpose-driven companies to lead rather than follow. Now is the time to make it loud and clear. Polls show that many people are still undecided if they support demand reduction as a way to increase energy independence. Using the Overton window to convince the undecided is an opportunity to establish saving plans that allow ambitious reductions.
A focus on promoting energy saving also ensures that war objectives do not compete with environmental goals but supplement them instead without reiterating.
New Audiences
There is a chance to reach audiences that are typically not susceptible to ecological arguments but would be motivated by other values, like independence or solidarity with Ukraine. A clear connection between the Ukraine war and energy has already been established, making a usually technical debate much more emotional. It’s not necessary to reach out to the already-converted environmentalists.?Now is the chance to rally support from audiences that would not usually support energy-saving objectives for environmental reasons.
How to do it?
We strongly recommend?moving away from the strategy of broadcasting?our ideas and demands to one that manages the emerging narrative in a way that establishes norms that define energy consumption for people and businesses. These norms then drive ambition and possibilities for energy legislation.
Managing narratives requires deep engagement with audiences to listen and understand and to create ownership, pride, and agency.?These are a few things you can do:
1. Co-create an energy-saving plan
Engage people in developing an energy-saving plan to become less dependent on Russian imports. Co-creation will help you provide pride and agency to people and kickstart the discussion of new norms. Engaging people does not mean that you can’t be propositional nor that you can’t already suggest immediate action as, for example, has been done by the GP CEE release “Unhooking Europe from Oil”. Consider your action plan as a draft and publicly invite comments and amendments. Provide the history of the development of your saving plan and which consultation initiatives resulted in the revision.
2. Make your savings visible, quantitative, and accountable
Make the objectives in your plan?tangible by adding numbers?to them.
Once you have started to track the progress, create metrics and gamify ways to register and communicate personal savings, be it from individuals, groups, or companies. Create?multiple ways to communicate results and allow people to celebrate?it as their contribution to creating independence and supporting Ukraine.
3. Aim to unite people behind some ideas supported by majorities
The intention behind promoting any solution or saving plan should be to create unity. As you saw in the scenarios, the most significant risk of no-transition is to have divided societies.
You want to line up many people behind a collectively developed saving plan, so start with the solutions people can quickly agree to and strengthen norms rather than stalling progress, creating disputes, and tiring out the process. Most people will instead support the general ideas of the plan and will leave the details to trusted experts.
4. Congratulate the effort and sacrifice
Making an effort or even making sacrifices is necessary to make people feel proud of their actions. So do not avoid talking about them. When a widely shared common good is established, like in this case, to show solidarity with Ukraine and get economic independence from Russia, people feel good about making an effort and talking about it. One can compare it to people’s efforts and sacrifices to compete in sports, either at events or on sports apps. But people also want to see the light at the end of the tunnel. When does the time of sacrifice end?
5. Showcase or create visible innovators and early movers
To successfully promote new political frameworks and societal norms, we aspire to create the action as soon as possible.
6. Create and celebrate new norms
Gradually raise the bar and establish the new standards as normal even before they become law.
7. Build pride and identity
Connect the new norms to new or old identities. For example, if your target audiences are nationalists, you can link energy-saving plans as norms to their national identity (good Germans drive no faster than 100km/h). And yes, it does not help if you are saying it; you need nationalism, aka peers expressing it. If they are a faith group, make it a feature of their compassion; if they just have found purpose in organising themselves to help Ukrainian refugees, make it the new norm for these people. The same applies to businesses. “Increasing numbers of food retailers are committed to saving 20% of energy in the next eight months.” A good example is the different professional groups emerging within the XR or FFF movement. And always remember that the identity group members need to spread the norm and not outsiders that impose it.
8. Monitor the shifts in your audiences
Make the best use of the efforts of various research organisations to?study the changes in public opinion.?This information can indicate the trends around the mindsets and behaviours that matter and highlight the challenges and opportunities ahead. As an example, we gathered the research available in April and May 2022 on public opinion in Europe around the support for energy policies and other relevant sentiments that would influence this, when creating our scenarios.
If possible, you could?set up a monitoring process?yourself to complement the polls and other studies of others, documenting the baseline and shifting public opinion around your specific action plan. Research data can also continuously be published to support normative shifts.
9. Propose, guard, and maintain fairness
For the public to support the plan, the sacrifices taken must be perceived as fairly shared between different societal groups.?Be extremely sensitive and listen to any narrative of injustice that evolves.?Spotting toxic narratives might require social media monitoring and regular conversations with a diverse group representing your audience.
10. Counter divisive forces, and don’t divide
Be mindful and vigilant in your response to divisive forces. Russian propaganda trolls, endangered vested interests, or other domestic agents will try to prevent you from succeeding. They will do it by dividing your audiences, polarising people, or fostering anger, anxiety, and frustration. Be on top of the narrative war.
The Timing Matters
Be mindful of?the stages that people collectively advance through as they move through a crisis?and design your campaign accordingly:
The Honeymoon Phase (now slowly fading)
The honeymoon phase is the best phase to align people behind a joint plan. Now you want to create collective ownership, as people are naturally prone to being inclusive. It is also when benevolence or even altruism prevails, and large parts of society share the wish to support those suffering most. Use this time to shape and align people behind the action plan and evolve emotions that motivate support for norms. Abstain from attacking others (besides the common enemy) during this phase. Rather, facilitate unity. Maintain people’s feelings of purpose and pride by giving them agency to prolong the emotions of the honeymoon phase.
The Disillusionment Phase
In the following disillusionment phase, people naturally retreat. Frustration, denial, and societal fragmentation increase. During this phase, divisive forces find it much easier to be successful. Now you need to care the most to maintain support and push for progress to avoid the impression of stagnation. Use stories to inform people about their psychological vulnerability and how divisive forces exploit it. Provide them with purpose, pride, and community. Create shared targets for people to direct their anger. Set milestones and help people see the end of the tunnel. When the light at the end of the tunnel is emotionally clear to them, they can move on to the next phase, the recovery phase.
For more information on engaging with different psychological stages of a crisis, consult?the Crisis Handbook.
Mindworks?is a social and cognitive science lab. We support changemakers in their mission to change mindsets and behaviour, protect and conserve the environment and promote peace. Mindworks supports operations across the world with an emphasis on the Global South.
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