2010
DOI: 10.1080/13241583.2010.11465373
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Australians’ Water Conservation Behaviours and Attitudes

Abstract: The Australian water crisis can be addressed in many ways: ranging from increasing water conservation behaviours to minimize demand, through to producing water through large scale water augmentation projects. Due to the extended drought experienced in many locations across Australia in recent years, there has been a recent focus on developing wastewater recycling and seawater desalination plants. While this is an important measure for emergency water supply, water conservation should still play a major role in… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(49 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
(4 reference statements)
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“…Indeed, the perceived inconvenience and the costs of water saving appliances may weaken people's water saving intentions [21]. On the opposite end, income and education may positively influence people's water saving intentions [22], as well as receptiveness of water saving-related information [23] and concerns over future water shortage [24].…”
Section: The Theory Of Planned Behavior and Water Saving Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the perceived inconvenience and the costs of water saving appliances may weaken people's water saving intentions [21]. On the opposite end, income and education may positively influence people's water saving intentions [22], as well as receptiveness of water saving-related information [23] and concerns over future water shortage [24].…”
Section: The Theory Of Planned Behavior and Water Saving Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As behavioral changes have no financial costs, we included behavioral hassle costs [Dolnicar and Hurlimann, 2010;Rosenberg et al, 2007] that reflect inconvenience costs to household dwellers and that we have linked to income, because of decreasing income-elasticity of demand, and again to the consciousness factor, assuming that consciousness decreases hassle costs. The behavioral cost for the action i in the household j is given by the following expression: where P i is an engineering estimated parameter for the hourly hassle cost of action i given in Table 1; I j the annual income of the household j; and CF j the consciousness factor for the household j.…”
Section: 1002/2014wr016821mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hassle costs are additions to financial costs that reflect inconvenience costs to households beyond purely financial costs of conservation actions. Often, households do not reduce consumption due to the hassle costs of conservation (Dolinicar and Hurlimann, 2010). Unfortunately, little has been written on estimating hassle costs of conservation activities.…”
Section: Short-term Actionsmentioning
confidence: 99%