The politics of phasing out fossil fuels: party positions and voter reactions in Norway


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Date

2025

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

To mitigate climate change, fossil fuels need to be phased out, but political parties may fear a voter backlash when implementing the required policies. We investigate whether such backlash occurred in Norway, a multi-party democracy reliant on a large petroleum sector. Specifically, we analyse whether the loss of jobs in the petroleum industry due to the 2014 crash of the international oil price has influenced political support for the petroleum sector. Using data from party manifestos, we find that party positions on the petroleum sector remained constant over time even during an industry downturn. Pro-petroleum parties capitalized on the oil price shock by increasing their vote shares. However, the reaction remained local and confined to parties whose voters are not overwhelmingly concerned with other subjects, such as immigration. The voter gains enjoyed by pro-petroleum parties did not arise at the expense of pro-fossil fuel phaseout parties; instead, it was parties with an ambiguous position on the issue that incurred losses. Hence, multi-party politics of fossil fuel phaseouts are complex and taking a pro-phaseout position may not be politically costly.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

25 (1)

Pages / Article No.

15 - 28

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Energy transition; economic voting; multi-party democracy; Fossil fuels

Organisational unit

09550 - Schmidt, Tobias / Schmidt, Tobias check_circle

Notes

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