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The Future of Energy? Building Resilience to ExxonMobil’s Disinformation through Disclosures and Inoculation

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Disinformation campaigns can significantly impact beliefs about climate change. This study involved an online experiment with 1,045 U.S. participants, exposing them to a misleading ExxonMobil advertisement, some with disclosures and others preceded by inoculation messages. Participants were divided into five conditions: a control group, a group exposed to pre-bunking messages from U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, and groups shown social media posts featuring the ad—with or without disclosures—claiming ExxonMobil’s commitment to renewable energy. Results showed the ad effectively influenced beliefs, but disclosures helped participants recognize the content as advertising, and inoculation messages reduced susceptibility, though not entirely. These findings highlight the value of using disclosures and inoculation to counter climate disinformation, providing a foundation for communication strategies that support climate action.

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Journal Title

npj Climate Action

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Journal ISSN

2731-9814
2731-9814

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Publisher

Springer

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Funded by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1144], Cambridge Humanities Research Grants [ALBN], and CRASSH Research Lab grants for climaTRACES Lab

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