Climate Political Landscape Index · Methodology
How an automated classifier turns 407,000 lines of party manifestos into structured measures of where parties stand on climate and energy — explained for a first-time reader.
The project has gathered the election manifestos and platform documents of major parties across 22 countries — 367 party-elections in all — and split them into roughly 407,000 individual statements, one short claim or pledge each. A statement might be “We will legislate net zero by 2050” or “Scrap the carbon tax that is punishing working families.”
A large language model reads every statement, one at a time, in its original language — no translation — and fills in a fixed set of fields. Those fields, together, are the “codebook.” The model never invents a final score: it makes many small, reliable judgments per statement, and a transparent formula adds them up afterward.
Each statement is read twice, by two different sets of instructions:
Why split them? For a measured reason. When everything was asked in one combined reading, the extra load made the model measurably worse at one of the core position judgments. Keeping the readings separate keeps the headline numbers clean.
Filled in for every statement.
| Field | What it captures | The allowed answers |
|---|---|---|
| Relevant? | Is this about climate, energy, or fossil extraction at all? Deliberately over-inclusive — better to over-catch and filter later. | yes / no |
| Channel | Is it about using energy and cutting emissions, or producing it? | demand / supply / both |
| Object | The main thing named. | fossil / clean / policy / actor / other |
| Direction | The party’s stance toward the thing it names — not whether it helps the climate. Backing a fossil fuel counts as “for,” even if dressed up as “clean.” | for / against / mixed |
| Firmness | How binding the commitment is — a rising ladder. | rhetoric → aspiration → pledge → quantified target → target + date → target + funding |
| Timing | How soon the party plans to act. | near / medium / long / none given |
| Backlash | Is the party trying to reverse climate progress? “Denial” is reserved for an explicit rejection of the science. | none / rollback / denial |
| Distributive | Does it address who pays and who benefits — and whom does it name? | a flag + named cost-bearers / beneficiaries |
| Adaptation relation | If it discusses adapting to impacts, how does that relate to cutting emissions? “Substitute” — adapt instead of cutting — is a subtle form of delay. | complement / independent / substitute |
| Confidence + quote | A self-rating, plus the exact text kept as a receipt. | high / medium / low + verbatim |
Filled in for every statement.
For each reason a party invokes, the model records which of these it is:
For each cue, it also records how it’s used — the party endorses it, rebuts it, or merely reports it — and, where it applies, whether it’s framed as a loss or a gain.
Every organization or interest the party names — a firm, union, NGO, government body, industry association, and so on — is recorded with which side it’s on (fossil or clean) and the party’s posture toward it: ally, adversary, neutral, or just-mentioned.
“Labor’s carbon tax is driving up power bills for working families, and we will repeal it.”
Rolled up, this one statement pushes the party’s clean-energy position toward against, adds to its backlash score, and contributes a cost / loss argument to how it makes its case.
From the two readings, the index derives — for each party, then rolled up to each country by seat share:
| Position | Where the party stands on clean vs. fossil energy — as two separate scores, never merged. |
| Ambition | How ambitious its climate program is, and whether that ambition targets the sectors that actually pollute. |
| Backlash | How much intent it carries to reverse climate progress. |
| Producer ties | Whether it acts as a vehicle for fossil vs. clean producers. |
| Timing | Whether it plans near-term action or delay. |
| Distribution | Who it says bears the costs and reaps the benefits. |
| Adaptation | How seriously it treats adapting to unavoidable impacts. |
| later | From the second reading: whom the party names as allies and adversaries, and how similarly rival parties frame the issue. |