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Increasing the Influence of CO 2 Emissions Information on Car Purchase

Title:

Increasing the Influence of CO 2 Emissions Information on Car Purchase

Daziano, Ricardo A., Waygood, E.O.D., Patterson, Zachary and Kohlová, Markéta Braun (2017) Increasing the Influence of CO 2 Emissions Information on Car Purchase. Journal of Cleaner Production . ISSN 09596526 (In Press)

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.07.001

Abstract

In response to concerns related to climate change, and an attempt to encourage more sustainable behavior, individuals are often provided with information on greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) of consumer items, such as personal vehicles. Currently in the US, information on vehicle efficiency is provided as grams of carbon dioxide (CO2) per mile. Previous research presenting CO2 as a mass and testing willingness-to-pay through Discrete Choice Experiment has found that such information can influence vehicle choice. However, other research has questioned whether how this information is presented might affect choice. That research argues that CO2 emission information generally lacks contextualization that allows for interpretation. As well, it argues that the type of contextualization may affect choices. That research though did not test willingness-to-pay and the strength of its influence is not clear. In addition, research exists that argues that using pro-social, as opposed to financial, contextualization might be more influential on people’s choices. Thus, the purpose of this paper is to build on these previous findings on how CO2 emissions are presented to determine whether changing how that information impacts vehicle choice with a Discrete Choice Experiment of vehicle choice analyzed using latent class modeling. No previous study has so robustly studied the influence that different framings might have on vehicle purchase. Five different methods of presenting CO2 information are tested in this experiment: CO2 emissions as grams per mile (current method), CO2 emissions as pounds per year (consistent imperial units), CO2 emissions as tons per year (yearly contextualization), an annual tax on CO2 (yearly financial contextualization), and CO2 as a percentage of the 2025 US EPA reduction target of 26% from 2005 levels (social goal contextualization). Results demonstrate that the current method results in lowest willingness to pay for CO2 emission reductions, while the social goal contextualization results in the highest.

Divisions:Concordia University > Faculty of Arts and Science > Geography, Planning and Environment
Item Type:Article
Refereed:Yes
Authors:Daziano, Ricardo A. and Waygood, E.O.D. and Patterson, Zachary and Kohlová, Markéta Braun
Journal or Publication:Journal of Cleaner Production
Date:1 July 2017
Funders:
  • National Science Foundation Award
Digital Object Identifier (DOI):10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.07.001
ID Code:982665
Deposited By: Danielle Dennie
Deposited On:05 Jul 2017 20:45
Last Modified:01 Jul 2018 00:00

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