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A glimmer of hope: Pro-environmental behavior increases positive emotions after confrontation with environmental threat

Peter Zeier, Florian Lange, Zarah Rowland, Michèle Wessa, Mario Wenzel

2025Journal of Environmental Psychology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When confronted with ecological crises, people may experience a variety of emotions ranging, e.g., from fear to anger and guilt. The increasing prevalence of eco-emotions raises the question of how to manage these emotional states. Although individuals can choose from a variety of emotion regulation strategies, some strategies have been found to thwart pro-environmental behavior. In a series of experimental studies, we examined the emotion regulation potential of pro-environmental behavior itself. Participants in exploratory Studies 1a and 1b were presented a text about the loss of biodiversity and then decided how much time to spend on an effort task that yields donations to an environmental organization. More pro-environmental behavior was associated with an increase in hope and a decrease in fear in both studies and a decrease in guilt in Study 1b. However, more pro-environmental behavior was confounded with a greater time interval between emotional ratings. In preregistered Study 2, we controlled for possible cool-down effects by having participants complete a time-limited task that would either yield donations to an environmental organization or have no pro-environmental consequences after reading the biodiversity text. Similar to Studies 1a and 1b, participants in the pro-environmental behavior group compared to the control group reported a stronger increase in hope. However, both groups reported a similar decrease in fear and guilt. Consistent with previous research, pro-environmental behavior seems especially effective in upregulating positive emotions. Drawing hope from pro-environmental behavior while maintaining a certain level of concern and responsibility is discussed as an adaptive emotional response to environmental threat. • Environmental threat increases fear and guilt and decreases hope • Pro-environmental behavior increases hope after environmental threat • Pro-environmental behavior does not affect fear or guilt after environmental threat

Topics & Concepts

PsychologySocial psychologyCriminologyEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityBehavioral Health and InterventionsSocial and Intergroup Psychology