AcknowledgementThe authors are grateful to the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Sustainable Technologies Programme for funding the project: "Trade-offs in decisionmaking for sustainable technologies" (award RES-388-25-0001), of which this paper is an output. The authors also thank the anonymous reviewers for their comments that helped shape this paper.Keywords: ethical, green, environmental, sustainable, consumer, purchase, consumption, behaviour
AbstractThe "attitude/behaviour gap" or 'values/action gap' is where 30% of consumers report that they are very concerned about environmental issues but they are struggling to translate this into purchases. For example, the market share for ethical foods remains at 5 per cent of sales. This paper investigates the purchasing process for green consumers in relation to consumer technology products in the UK. Data was collected from 81 self declared green consumers through in depth interviews on recent purchases of technology products. A green consumer purchasing model is developed and success criteria for closing the gap between green consumer's values and their behaviour. The paper concludes that incentives and single issue labels (like the current energy rating label) would help consumers concentrate their limited efforts. More fundamentally, "being green" needs time and space in peoples' lives that is not available in increasingly busy lifestyles. Implications for policy and business are proposed.
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