What trade-off for astronomy between greenhouse gas emissions and the societal benefits? A sociological approach
P. Hennebelle, M. Barsuglia, F. Billebaud, M. Bouffard, N., Champollion, M. Grybos, H. Meheut, M. Parmentier, P. Petitjean

TL;DR
This study explores how French astrophysicists perceive the societal benefits of astronomy versus the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, highlighting differing opinions on community-wide emission reductions and the discipline's societal impact.
Contribution
It provides qualitative insights into scientists' perceptions of GHG reduction trade-offs in astrophysics, an area with limited prior sociological research.
Findings
Astronomy is valued for education and public fascination.
Most researchers see GHG reduction as necessary, mainly within private spheres.
Opinions vary on reducing large research facilities and community-wide emissions.
Abstract
The threat posed to humanity by global warming has led scientists to question the nature of their activities and the need to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions from research. Until now, most studies have aimed at quantifying the carbon footprints and relatively less works have addressed the ways GHG emissions can be significantly reduced. A factor two reduction by 2030 implies to think beyond increases in the efficacy of current processes, which will have a limited effect, and beyond wishful thinking about large new sources of energy. Hence, choices among research questions or allocated means within a given field will be needed. They can be made in light of the perceived societal utility of research activities. Here, we addressed the question of how scientists perceive the impact of GHG reduction on their discipline and a possible trade-off between the societal utility of their…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Climate Change Communication and Perception · Conferences and Exhibitions Management
