Abstract

Environmental problems caused by excessive carbon emissions are becoming increasingly prominent and have received heightened attention in recent years. Encouraging people to adopt low-carbon behavior to reduce carbon emissions is desirable. Based on social learning theory, we developed and tested a moderated mediation model to investigate when and how environmentally specific servant (ESS) leadership impacts employees’ low-carbon behavior (i.e., private low-carbon behavior and public low-carbon behavior). We tested our theoretical framework with a sample of 483 subordinates and their direct supervisors working in northern China. The results indicate that ESS leadership is positively related to employees’ low-carbon behavior, and that environmental self-accountability plays a mediating role in this relationship. In addition, power distance orientation strengthens the direct effects of ESS leadership on employees’ environmental self-accountability and low-carbon behavior, as well as the indirect effect of ESS leadership on private low-carbon behavior via environmental self-accountability. Our findings contribute to the literature surrounding ESS leadership and low-carbon behavior, and help to promote green development and thus achieve the goals of carbon neutrality and decreasing carbon dioxide emissions.

Highlights

  • The results suggest that environmentally specific servant (ESS) leadership is significantly positively related to environmental self-accountability (r = 0.331, p < 0.01), private low-carbon behavior (r = 0.299, p < 0.01), and public low-carbon behavior (r = 0.296, p < 0.01)

  • The results show that compared to employees with low power distance orientation, employees with high power distance orientation learn the environmental protection behavior of ESS leadership more actively and participate in more low-carbon behavior

  • We found that ESS leadership positively impacts employees’ low-carbon behavior, including private low-carbon behavior and public low-carbon behavior

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. The observed increases in carbon dioxide concentration has led to numerous serious environmental problems, such as climate change, sea-level rise, and species extinction [1,2]. Such problems have received increasing attention in recent years. In order to address these issues, UN2030 Agenda, Cop, and Fit for 55 have called for a reduction in carbon emissions. The Chinese government has decided to adopt more effective measures to realize peak carbon dioxide emissions by 2030, and strive to achieve carbon neutrality by

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