1 / 8

Green Energy & Perceptions of Wind in Ontario for Friends of Wind Ontario

Green Energy & Perceptions of Wind in Ontario for Friends of Wind Ontario. Prepared by: Dr. Paul Seccaspina CEO & Owner Oraclepoll Research Limited September 8, 2011. Overview Methodology and Logistics.

Télécharger la présentation

Green Energy & Perceptions of Wind in Ontario for Friends of Wind Ontario

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Green Energy & Perceptions of Wind in Ontario forFriends of Wind Ontario Prepared by: Dr. Paul Seccaspina CEO & Owner Oraclepoll Research Limited September 8, 2011

  2. OverviewMethodology and Logistics • The following data references the survey research findings from recent Oraclepoll Research Ltd polling • The findings are Ontario wide, with regional breakouts • Data was collected in an omnibus survey in August • 1,000 voting age respondents 18+ were interviewed, with a margin of error of +/- 3.1%, 19/20 times • These questions were not commissioned

  3. Overall • “Respondents were first asked what they felt was the most important issue facing the province of Ontario at this time. A total of 22% named the economy, closely followed by 20% that said health care and 19% job creation. The budget was cited by 7%, the environment by 6% and rising utility prices by 3%. A total of 10% did not know or had no opinion. • When then asked about their vote intent, 42% of decided voters back the PC’s, 38% the Liberals, while the NDP trail with 13% support and the Green’s with 7%. A total of 14% were undecided. • Voters are split on the issue of change in Ontario politics. Slightly fewer than half or 49% of respondents said that it is time for a change of governments in Ontario, while 30% claimed that the Liberals should be re-elected and 22% did not know. • When asked why they would favor change, 21% named taxation, 13% health care, 11% job creation, 7% honesty, 5% rising prices, 5% the environment, 5% education, and 5% the budget deficit. 21% had no response or were unsure.

  4. Green Energy Initiatives (In general) “I support green energy production in Ontario” • 74% of Ontarians support green energy initiatives. • Support was highest among females (78%) compared to males (69%) and among younger respondents 18-34 (84%). While support was high across all regions of the province, it was strongest in Toronto (82%) and in the north of Ontario (85%). 72% in the Southwest. • While Liberals (84%) and NDP voters (83%) had the highest level of support a 58% majority of PC’s also support green energy initiatives.

  5. Support for Wind Power • “I support wind power production in Ontario”. • 70% support wind power in Ontario, 26 oppose & 4% were unsure • Support was highest among females (76%) compared to males (65%) and among younger respondents 18-34 (81%). While support was high across all regions of the province, it was strongest in Toronto (79%) and in the north of Ontario (82%). 68% in the Southwest. • Liberals (80%) and NDP voters (82%) had the highest level of support compared to 54% of PC’s.

  6. Reasons to Support Wind • All respondents were asked about the importance of issues as it • relates to support for wind. • 98% - if there were cost savings • 90% - long term sustainable source for energy • 88% - good for the environment (in general) • 81% - pollution reduction / clean air • 75% - job creation

  7. Most Trusted Source for Info • All respondents were also asked about what source they find most • trustworthy when it comes information about energy issues. • 32% said the media • 24% claimed their local utility • 6% government agencies • 5% the internet or websites • 5% experts • 5% politicians • 13% did not know or none

  8. THANK YOU

More Related