Public Responses to Emergency Energy Conservation Messaging: Evidence from the 2021 Winter Storm in Norman, Oklahoma

Author:

Goodin Amy S.1,Rogers Cynthia L.2ORCID,Zhang Angela3

Affiliation:

1. a K20 Center for Educational and Community Renewal, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

2. b Department of Economics, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

3. c Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

Abstract This study investigates whether and how energy consumers respond to public appeals for voluntary conservation during an extended and extreme winter energy emergency. Public appeals are an increasingly important tool for managing demand when grid disruptions are anticipated, especially given the increase in severe-weather events. We add to the few studies on winter energy crises by investigating a case in which there were repeated public appeals during an extended event. Using a survey implemented via social media immediately after the February 2021 winter storm, we asked residents of Norman, Oklahoma, a series of questions about their responses to the public appeals distributed by the utility company, including whether they followed the actions suggested in the messages as well as where they got information and their level of concern about the storm impacts. We compare mean responses across a range of categorical answers using standard independent t tests, one-way ANOVA tests, and chi-squared tests. Among the 296 respondents, there was a high degree of reported compliance, including setting the thermostat to 68°F (20°C) or lower (72%), avoiding using major appliances (86%), and turning off nonessential appliances, lights, and equipment (89%). Our findings suggest a high degree of willingness to voluntarily reduce energy consumption during an energy emergency. This is encouraging for energy managers: public appeals can be disseminated via social media at a low cost and in real time during an extended emergency event. Significance Statement The purpose of this study is to better understand whether and how energy consumers respond to public appeals for voluntary conservation during a winter energy emergency event. This is important because voluntary conservation can help utility managers minimize grid disruptions, particularly if consumers respond to evolving conditions. Our survey results suggest that individuals are willing to voluntarily conserve energy and follow conservation recommendations provided by utility managers during a severe winter event.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Global and Planetary Change

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4. Culture, local capacity, and outside aid: A community perspective on disaster response after the 2009 tsunami in American Samoa;Binder, S. B.,2017

5. Blunt, K., 2022: America’s power grid is increasingly unreliable: Behind a rising number of outages are new stresses on the system caused by aging power lines, a changing climate and a power-plat fleet going green. Wall Street Journal, 18 February, https://www.wsj.com/articles/americas-power-grid-is-increasingly-unreliable-11645196772.

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