SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 14
Downloaden Sie, um offline zu lesen
Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the
Environment – A Worldwide Tracking Survey
HIGHLIGHTS REPORT
May 2009
I NT RO D UC TI O N
National Geographic conducted its inaugural Greendex survey in January 2008. At the time,
the economy was strong, although growth was beginning to slow. Countries like India and
China had recently experienced unprecedented prosperity. New wealth was being created and
the middle class was growing.

Meanwhile, the environment had recently been polling at unprecedented levels as an issue of
public concern. Climate change and global warming had become household concepts as
consumers’ knowledge improved.

That first Greendex survey of 14 countries around the world ranked average consumers in
those countries according to the environmental sustainability of their behavior. Consumers in
the large developing economies of Brazil, India and China scored highest, while Canadians and
Americans, with their relatively massive environmental footprints, scored lowest.

The 2008 findings
raised concerns
about what
economic
development and
the material
aspirations that
come with it
would mean for
the impact that
the average
consumer in
rapidly
developing
countries has on the environment. At the same time, the results reminded us that consumers
in wealthy countries have a proportionately greater impact on the environment than others—
and that they can and should make more sustainable choices.

The world has changed since January 2008. Following what was an extremely volatile year by
many measures, National Geographic replicated its Greendex survey in January 2009. How has
consumer behavior changed from one year ago? And if it has changed, why? In what
environmental direction are we headed? The following is an interpretive summary of
Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the Environment—A Worldwide Tracking Survey.




                                              2
The Greendex is a comprehensive measure of consumer behavior in 65 areas relating to housing,
transportation, food and consumer goods. Greendex 2009 ranks average consumers in 17 countries—up
from 14 in 2008 for which changes
are tracked—according to the
environmental impact of their
discretionary and nondiscretionary
consumption patterns within these
four major categories.

Each respondent earned a score
reflecting the environmental impact
of his or her consumption patterns
within each, and four corresponding
“sub-indices” were created.
Consumers were then assigned an overall Greendex score (a measure of the relative environmental
sustainability of their consumption patterns) out of 100, based on their performance within the four
sub-indices.
G RE E NDE X 2 00 9: O V E RALL R E S U LT S
In their second annual survey to measure and monitor consumer behaviors that have an
impact on the environment, the National Geographic Society and the international polling
firm GlobeScan have found an increase in environmentally friendly consumer behavior in 13 of
the 14 countries that were surveyed in both 2008 and 2009.

Consumption as measured by the Greendex is determined both by the choices consumers
actively make — such as repairing rather than replacing items, using cold water to wash
laundry, choosing green products rather than environmentally unfriendly ones — and choices
that are controlled more by their circumstances — such as the climate they live in or the
availability of green products or public transport. The research considers both of these types
of factors, with 60 percent of the 65-variable index based on choice or discretionary
behavior.

As seen last year, the top-scoring consumers of 2009 are in the developing economies of India,
Brazil and China. Argentina and South Korea, both new additions to the survey, are virtually
tied for fourth, followed by Mexicans, Hungarians and Russians. Ranks ninth through
thirteenth, the latter a three-way tie, are all occupied by Europeans, as well as Australians in
twelfth. Japanese, U.S. and Canadian consumers again score lowest.




                                                   3
Much of the increase in the overall 2009 Greendex scores was due to higher scores within the
category of housing, where the index measures the energy and resources consumed by
people’s homes. Changes within the categories of personal transportation, food and consumer
goods were mixed, with some up and some down. Findings within each of these four
categories are described in more detail below.

First conducted in 2008, the Greendex survey was
expanded in 2009, with the addition of Argentina,
South Korea and Sweden to Australia, Brazil,
Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain,
Hungary, India, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Spain and
the United States. Seventeen thousand consumers
were polled online (1,000 in each country),
answering questions that measured their behavior
in the areas of housing, transportation, food and
consumption of goods.

An examination of the degree of change in
Greendex scores reveals some interesting clusters
of countries. Consumers registering the best year-
on-year improvement in environmentally
sustainable consumer behavior are the Spanish,
Germans, French and Australians, while Russians
and Mexicans show the smallest increase.
Brazilians are the only consumers measured in 2008
and 2009 to show a decrease in their Greendex
score.

The results suggest that both cost considerations
and environmental concerns may have motivated
consumers to adopt more environmentally
sustainable behavior over the past year, hence the
general increase in Greendex scores. The 2009
Greendex survey has identified a number of types
of environmentally friendly behavior that have
become more common, and many of these result in
cost savings for consumers. For example consumers in 11 of the 14 countries surveyed in 2008
and 2009 are more likely this year to report that they keep their heating and cooling settings
in their households lower to save energy. The practice of washing laundry in cold water rather
than hot to save energy has also become more widespread in nine countries surveyed in both
years. Preference for buying second-hand rather than new household items has become more
widespread, as has as the preference for repairing broken items to extend their useful lives.


                                              4
The survey asked
consumers whether
they had reduced
the consumption of
energy in their
homes over the past
year, and whether
they reduced the
amount of fuel they
consumed in their
motorized vehicles.
In both cases, those
who said that they
had reduced energy
and fuel consumption
were asked why. Cost
is by far the most
frequent explanation
offered for the
reduction, with
between eight and
nine in ten consumers
selecting cost as one
of their top two
reasons. In
comparison, between
three and four in ten
say that their
environmental
concerns were one of
the top two motives for the reduction.

It appears, then, that cost was an important factor behind this year’s increase in consumers’
Greendex scores. Given the current recession, this interpretation is all the more credible.
But, concern about the environment likely played a role as well. At the beginning of 2008,
environmental concern and engagement among the public was higher than it perhaps had ever
been, and many programs and initiatives by governments and companies were put in place as
a result. The severity of the economic slowdown was not yet fully yet anticipated. While the
economy is by far the most top-of-mind national issue measured on our 2009 survey, overall
concern about the environment is down only slightly from a year earlier.



                                             5
This environmental concern is reflected in consumer behavior. For example, the percentage
of consumers who say they buy certain products specifically because they are better for the
environment than other products, an action unlikely to consistently result in savings to the
consumer, increased in five countries in 2009, and decreased in only one.

Air pollution, climate change/global warming and water
pollution rank fourth through sixth on a list of 12 global
concerns, just behind the economy, fuel costs and
poverty. Roughly two-thirds of consumers say they are
concerned about each of these environmental issues.
Six in 10 consumers across the 17 surveyed countries
agree that people need to consume less in order to
improve the environment for future generations (only
12 percent disagree), showing that consumers recognize
the connection between their actions and the
environment.

The notion of reinforcing co-benefits is perhaps a useful
one when weighing the relative impact of the economy
and environmental concerns on consumer behavior.
Consumers increasingly realize that they can save
money and help the environment at the same time, and
they want to do both.

However, Brazilians, Russians and Mexicans, who
increased their Greendex score from 2008 the least,
share a number of characteristics that may discourage
green consumer behavior. Consumers in these countries
are more likely than others to believe that
environmental problems are so severe that there is
little they, as individuals, can do about them. In other
words, they lack a feeling of empowerment when it
comes to the environment. This belief has grown in all
three of these countries since 2008, yet it has decreased in Germany, where Greendex scores
have improved more than in other countries.
HO USI NG
The housing sub-index measures things like the size of one’s residence relative to the number
of inhabitants, home heating and cooling, retrofits that increase efficiency, the purchase of
renewable energy, the use of energy-efficient major appliances, and water usage. In all, the
sub-index includes 24 different variables.




                                                6
Consumers in all surveyed countries registered significant improvements in their 2009 housing
scores, accounting for a large portion of the increases in the overall Greendex scores.
Brazilians, Indians and Mexicans again top this sub-index, as they did in 2008.

Countries in which the
average consumer’s
housing score improved
most notably are India,
China, Mexico, Spain and
France. U.S. consumers,
who earned the lowest
housing scores, also
improved from 2008, but
by a smaller margin than
all other consumers
surveyed. British and
Japanese consumers also
exhibit such a pattern.
People in developing
countries score higher in
this area in part because they generally have smaller residences and use less energy in their
homes, often not needing home heating.

This year’s survey found that since 2008, consumers across many countries are now more
likely to engage in energy-saving activities, such as adjusting thermostat settings (up in 11
countries), minimizing their use of fresh water (up in nine countries), and washing laundry in
cold water to save energy (up in nine countries). This is due to both cost and environmental
considerations. For example, when the three in ten consumers who say they reduced their
consumption of energy for heating or cooling their homes over the past year are asked why
they did so, eight in ten say that cost was one of the top two reasons. Four in ten say that
their environmental concerns were behind the change in behavior. Thus, regardless of the
motivation, some consumer behavior as measured by the Greendex survey has shifted in ways
that benefit the environment.

Another factor behind the increase in Greendex scores is the increase in ownership of energy
efficient appliances, as some consumers have replaced their older, less efficient units with
newer, often more efficient ones. Televisions are a good example, with more efficient LCD or
plasma screens becoming more common. The percentage of consumers reporting that their
household contains an efficient television is up in seven countries from last year, and by five
points overall. This and other examples represent cases where industry has provided
consumers with products that help them reduce their environmental footprint, and consumers
have enthusiastically embraced them.


                                               7
Brazilians continue to be much more likely than other consumers to purchase renewable or
“green” electricity (Brazil has invested heavily in energy production from biomass), and this
year consumers in two other emerging economies, India and Mexico, have shown increases in
“green” electricity purchases. Argentineans, Russians and Mexicans are the most likely to
report installing energy-saving appliances in the past year. Canadians, Russians and
Argentineans are more likely than others to have sealed drafts in their homes, installed
thermal windows, or installed or upgraded insulation this past year.
TRAN S P O RT A TI O N
The transportation sub-index measures things like the
ownership and driving of motorized vehicles, including
their size as an approximation of fuel efficiency, the
frequency of air travel, the use of public
transportation and trains, as well as the frequency of
walking or cycling as one’s primary means of
transportation. In all, 17 variables are included in the
transportation sub-index.

Overall, scores are flat or down on this sub-index from
last year. Consumers who show the biggest drop in
transportation scores live in India, Brazil, China,
Mexico, Russia, Canada and the United States. Despite
this drop, Chinese consumers scored highest overall in
the transportation sub-index, followed by Argentineans
and Indians. Greendex transportation scores fell less
(or remained essentially level) in Spain, Australia,
Germany and Britain. Australians, Canadians and
Americans again occupy the bottom of the ranking this
year.

Transportation-related behavior is generally more
environmentally friendly in developing countries where
consumers tend more than others to walk, cycle or use
public transportation, or choose to live close to their
most common destination. Russians, Chinese and South
Koreans are most likely to use public transportation
regularly, while Australians, Canadians and especially
Americans are the least likely to say that they do.

Despite their generally more environmentally friendly transportation behaviors, consumers in
developing countries saw the sharpest decline in 2009, perhaps as a result of peak prosperity
in early to mid-2008. In China, for example, car ownership is less common than in other



                                               8
countries, but it is increasing.
Further, fewer Chinese this year than
last report walking or riding a bike
frequently to their most common
destinations.

When asked whether they intend to
acquire a new or used motorized
vehicle in the coming year, Indians,
Brazilians, Mexicans and Chinese, in
that order, are the most likely to say
they probably will.

When asked to reflect on the past
year, many consumers report that
they decreased their vehicle fuel
consumption. When asked why, most
(seven in ten) say that cost was one of
their top two reasons. Three in ten
say that their environmental concern
was one of the main reasons for their
decreased fuel consumption.

Among motorized vehicle drivers only,
between three and eight in 10 across
the countries surveyed agree that
increased fuel prices caused at
least a temporary change in their
transportation habits. Among U.S.
drivers who say they changed their
transportation habits because of
higher fuel prices, 85 percent say
they have reduced how much they
drive. Among Chinese consumers
who say they have changed their
transportation habits due to fuel
prices, 85 percent say they have
increased the amount they bike or
walk. However, among all
consumers surveyed in China, the
percentage who walk or bike




                                          9
frequently appears to be down from last year.

Asked why they do not take public transportation more often, consumers most often cite
availability and efficiency as the reasons. Additionally, Indian and Russian consumers claim
public transportation is too crowded, Japanese attribute low usage of public transit to high
cost and Mexican consumers point to safety considerations.

Of all the four sub-indices, the 2009 transportation sub-index reveals the least progress from
2008, with scores in fact level or down. Transportation practices may indeed be the most
difficult for individual consumers to alter, with few available alternatives to what their
infrastructures offer.
FO O D
The food index comprises eight variables including the
frequency of consumption of locally produced foods,
foods grown or raised by oneself, fruits and vegetables,
beef, chicken, seafood and bottled water. Organic
foods are not included in this sub-index due to high
variability in the definition and understanding of
“organic” from country to country and dispute about
whether organic foods shipped a long distance are
environmentally superior to locally produced
conventional foods.

Indians, Australians and South Koreans top this index
this year, although Indian consumers’ score has
dropped from last year. Countries in which the average
consumer’s food score improved the most are
Germany, Australia and the United States; those whose
consumers’ scores dropped the most are India, Brazil
and Hungary.

Since 2008, consumers in seven surveyed countries, the
United States, Australia, Great Britain, France, Japan,
Mexico and Russia, decreased their consumption of
bottled water—suggesting that awareness of the
environmental issues associated with bottled water
consumption issues has increased. Swedes, at just 6
percent, are the least likely to drink bottled water
every day. Germans remain the most likely to drink
bottled water — 68 percent do so daily.

Indian consumers report eating fewer local foods and fruits and vegetables in 2009 than they
did in 2008, and increased consumption of imported foods and bottled water. However, their


                                              10
Greendex score is bolstered by the fact they eat the least amount of meat and seafood.
Consumers in most other countries tend to consume both meat and seafood at least once a
week.

Americans, British, Germans and
Spanish are more likely now than a
year ago to consume locally grown
foods several times a week or
more. This finding perhaps reflects
a growing consciousness about food
origins, manifested by trends such
as the “one-hundred mile diet.”
Brazilians and Indians are less
likely than last year to eat locally
grown foods.

Argentineans are the most common
eaters of beef, with 66 percent
saying they eat it several times a
week compared with 8 percent of
South Koreans or Hungarians. Mexicans have increased their beef consumption this year; 48
percent say they eat it several times a week compared with 39 percent last year. Ninety
percent of Japanese eat fish or seafood at least weekly; just 34 percent of Indians and 25
percent of Hungarians do.
G OO DS
The goods sub-index measures a mix of
everyday consumption habits and
preferences, as well as the number of “big-
ticket” items included within one’s
household, relative to the number of people
who live there. Specifically, the index
includes the purchase and/or avoidance of
specific products for environmental reasons,
the preference for reusable consumer goods
over disposable products, willingness to pay
an environmental premium, recycling
practices, and the number of large appliances
within one’s household, among other things.
All told, the goods sub-index is made up of 16
individual variables.



                                                 11
Topping this sub-index this year are Indians, South Koreans and Chinese. The biggest year-on-
year improvement was recorded by Indians, Russians and French, while Brazilians recorded
the biggest drop. The score for the average Chinese consumer also decreased more than for
most others.

Avoidance of environmentally unfriendly products, a
choice that is not necessarily motivated by cost
savings, is up among consumers in six countries.
Indians, Brazilians and Mexicans show the biggest year-
on-year increase in this area. These consumers, along
with Chinese, also are the most likely to say they buy
environmentally friendly products. Americans,
Hungarians, British, Spanish and Japanese are least
likely to do so. However, the percentage of consumers
who say they choose environmentally friendly products
over others has increased in five countries and has
decreased in just one (Russia).

Consumers in South Korea, Australia, Canada, the
United States and many of the European countries
surveyed report a decrease in consumption of
everyday household goods over the past year. While
seven in 10 of those who have reduced consumption of
household goods cite cost as one of their main
reasons, one-third say environmental concerns were
their primary motivating factor.

The frequency of recycling has substantially increased
in nine of the 14 tracking countries this year, perhaps
as result of expanding availability and consumer
participation. Consumers in developed countries such
as Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain,
and Spain tend to recycle most often. South Koreans
and Russians are the least likely to recycle.

Since 2008, the number of consumers who prefer to repair broken items rather than buy new
ones has risen in six of the countries, including Canada and the United States, and in
emerging economies such as Brazil, China and Mexico. There has also been a rise in the
number of consumers who prefer to buy second-hand items rather than new replacements.
This increase is observed in nearly half the countries surveyed and is another example of
where cost savings and environmental considerations reinforce each other.




                                              12
The French remain the most likely to use their own shopping bags, with this behavior up
among consumers in 12 of 14 countries where
this question was asked last year. The figure is
up particularly sharply in China, where free
plastic shopping bags were banned at the
beginning of 2008, after that year’s Greendex
survey was complete—a clear case in which
regulation can result in widespread change in
consumer behavior. Nearly four times as many
Chinese reported using their own shopping
bags this year as last. Russians and Americans

report the lowest use of their own bags, at
one-third each.

Swedes are the least likely to prefer
disposable household products over reusable
items, while Indians, Argentineans, Mexicans
and Brazilians say they are most likely to
prefer disposable products.


CO NCL US IO N
Overall, Greendex scores are
up from 2008. This is good
news. Many will ask the
question of whether this is
not due to the economic
downturn alone. The answer
to that question has to be no.
Clearly, economic conditions
have reined in consumption
levels, and that is reflected
in the increased Greendex
scores. At the same time,
however, environmental
concerns have remained
strong, and awareness of the
issues at hand has increased.
Consumers have been alerted to what they can do easily, and with cost savings as the needed
incentive, they have made choices to do so more than they did during 2008.



                                               13
What will happen as the next phase of economic growth, the expansion of the middle class
and increased prosperity ensue? Many, especially those in the rapidly developing countries,
still aspire to a large home or a nice car. The survey results prove it. The challenge remains
to ensure that what we all want is good for us and for future generations, and the priority for
industry and government must be to ensure that it is provided.

The environmentally positive choices that consumers have made so far have been the easy
ones. They have not given up their cars, nor relocated their homes to lessen the impact of
their commute to work. The changes have not required a tradeoff of cost or convenience.

The message to those that supply the products and services that they consume, and to those
that make the rules about how they behave, is a clear one: Make the right thing, provide the
right opportunities, and consumers will do the right thing.


DI S CO VE R Y O UR G R E E NDE X S CO R E
Individuals around the world can find out where they rank on the Greendex scale by visiting
nationalgeographic.com/greendex and taking an abbreviated survey. They can also examine
the Greendex survey results by country, measure their knowledge of some basic green issues
against what others around the world know and get tips on living a more environmentally
friendly lifestyle.




                                              14

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...
Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...
Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...AI Publications
 
Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...
Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...
Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...11leeco
 
Undergraduate Psychology Symposium
Undergraduate Psychology Symposium Undergraduate Psychology Symposium
Undergraduate Psychology Symposium Priya Ahluwalia
 
20 Sustainability Trends
20 Sustainability Trends20 Sustainability Trends
20 Sustainability Trendsmadisontom
 
Tort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thi
Tort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thiTort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thi
Tort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thiSALU18
 
A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...
A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...
A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...Dr. Linda Mary Simon
 
Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]
Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]
Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]Jeanne von Zastrow
 
IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...
IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...
IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...Khaira Al Hafi
 
THEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
THEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSTHEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
THEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSPeachy Essay
 
Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014
Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014
Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014UL Environment
 
Rokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studies
Rokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studiesRokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studies
Rokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studiesAli Mohsin
 
A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...
A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...
A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...Shreya Vaikunth Pai
 
Effect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable Energy
Effect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable EnergyEffect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable Energy
Effect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable Energyinventionjournals
 
Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...
Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...
Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...Bruce Cohen
 

Was ist angesagt? (18)

Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...
Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...
Consumer’s Attitude towards Environmental Sustainability while Purchasing Cov...
 
Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...
Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...
Developing Corporate Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Food System in H...
 
Undergraduate Psychology Symposium
Undergraduate Psychology Symposium Undergraduate Psychology Symposium
Undergraduate Psychology Symposium
 
20 Sustainability Trends
20 Sustainability Trends20 Sustainability Trends
20 Sustainability Trends
 
Tort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thi
Tort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thiTort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thi
Tort resit essay 2018 should you be deferred or referred in thi
 
Empirical Final
Empirical FinalEmpirical Final
Empirical Final
 
A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...
A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...
A study on customer satisfaction level on green products with special referen...
 
Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]
Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]
Fmi final fresh cat man webinar[1]
 
IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...
IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...
IDENTIFICATION OF GREEN CONSUMER PROFILE AND BEHAVIOR IN ORDER TO INCREASE GR...
 
THEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
THEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSTHEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
THEORIES AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
 
Planetary boundaries: an EEA perspective
Planetary boundaries: an EEA perspective Planetary boundaries: an EEA perspective
Planetary boundaries: an EEA perspective
 
Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014
Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014
Numbers to know_ IAQ and Furniture_2014
 
Rokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studies
Rokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studiesRokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studies
Rokka et al-2008-international_journal_of_consumer_studies
 
A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...
A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...
A STUDY ON GREEN CONSUMERISM AWARENESS AND PRACTICES AMONG WOMEN IN MANGALURU...
 
Effect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable Energy
Effect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable EnergyEffect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable Energy
Effect of Environmental Awareness on Willingness to Pay for Renewable Energy
 
A Model Using Household-Income and Household-Consumption Data to Estimate the...
A Model Using Household-Income and Household-Consumption Data to Estimate the...A Model Using Household-Income and Household-Consumption Data to Estimate the...
A Model Using Household-Income and Household-Consumption Data to Estimate the...
 
Chinese consumer attitude and purchase intent towards green products
Chinese consumer attitude and purchase intent towards green productsChinese consumer attitude and purchase intent towards green products
Chinese consumer attitude and purchase intent towards green products
 
Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...
Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...
Analyis of Dell and Walmart's Initiatives to Replace Harmful Chemicals in the...
 

Ähnlich wie Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the Environment

2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck
2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck
2011 - Green Brands Global Media DeckGreen Brands Survey
 
Sustainable land development
Sustainable land developmentSustainable land development
Sustainable land developmentPollenStrategy
 
Case Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docx
Case Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docxCase Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docx
Case Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docxjasoninnes20
 
Mainstream Green by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams
 Mainstream Green  by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams Mainstream Green  by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams
Mainstream Green by Graceann Bennett and Freya WilliamsNOEMÍ MEDINA
 
Green Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consulting
Green Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consultingGreen Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consulting
Green Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consultingDaxue Consulting
 
Green Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green Agenda
Green Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green AgendaGreen Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green Agenda
Green Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green AgendaIBM Government
 
UL Environment - Numbers To Know
UL Environment - Numbers To KnowUL Environment - Numbers To Know
UL Environment - Numbers To KnowUL Environment
 
The Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed Nations
The Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed NationsThe Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed Nations
The Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed NationsMira McKee
 
The Career Guide to Green Jobs
The Career Guide to Green JobsThe Career Guide to Green Jobs
The Career Guide to Green JobsKelly Services
 
THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC
THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC
THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC yann le gigan
 
UNC MBA: A Primer On Green Building
UNC MBA:  A Primer On Green BuildingUNC MBA:  A Primer On Green Building
UNC MBA: A Primer On Green BuildingDoctor Aal-Anubia
 
The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...
The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...
The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...Alexander Decker
 
Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...
Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...
Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...Ajinkya Chikte
 
North America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptx
North America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptxNorth America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptx
North America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptxJayaPrakashNarayanaP1
 
IKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdf
IKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdfIKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdf
IKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdfHarshSrivastava861036
 
Green Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and Z
Green Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and ZGreen Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and Z
Green Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and ZINVISTA2
 

Ähnlich wie Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the Environment (20)

2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck
2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck
2011 - Green Brands Global Media Deck
 
Sustainable land development
Sustainable land developmentSustainable land development
Sustainable land development
 
Cradle to Cradle Design
Cradle to Cradle DesignCradle to Cradle Design
Cradle to Cradle Design
 
Case Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docx
Case Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docxCase Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docx
Case Study #2Climate Change & the Paris DealIn December .docx
 
Environment and Climate change
Environment and Climate changeEnvironment and Climate change
Environment and Climate change
 
Mainstream Green by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams
 Mainstream Green  by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams Mainstream Green  by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams
Mainstream Green by Graceann Bennett and Freya Williams
 
Green Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consulting
Green Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consultingGreen Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consulting
Green Guilt Report: Sustainable Consumption in China by daxue consulting
 
Green Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green Agenda
Green Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green AgendaGreen Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green Agenda
Green Government Initiatives: A Study of How Governments Define the Green Agenda
 
UL Environment - Numbers To Know
UL Environment - Numbers To KnowUL Environment - Numbers To Know
UL Environment - Numbers To Know
 
The Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed Nations
The Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed NationsThe Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed Nations
The Rise of Green Initiatives in Developed Nations
 
The Career Guide to Green Jobs
The Career Guide to Green JobsThe Career Guide to Green Jobs
The Career Guide to Green Jobs
 
Going Green is Good for Business
Going Green is Good for BusinessGoing Green is Good for Business
Going Green is Good for Business
 
THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC
THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC
THE GLOBAL GREEN ECONOMY INDEX GGEI 2014 DUAL CITIZEN LLC
 
Ggei report2014
Ggei report2014Ggei report2014
Ggei report2014
 
UNC MBA: A Primer On Green Building
UNC MBA:  A Primer On Green BuildingUNC MBA:  A Primer On Green Building
UNC MBA: A Primer On Green Building
 
The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...
The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...
The impact of environmental accounting and reporting on sustainable developme...
 
Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...
Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...
Awareness, Attitudes, Barriers, And Drivers Towards Adoption Of Low-Waste, Su...
 
North America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptx
North America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptxNorth America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptx
North America TPA 3 Narrated Storyboard.pptx
 
IKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdf
IKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdfIKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdf
IKEA Climate Action Report 20180906 (002).pdf
 
Green Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and Z
Green Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and ZGreen Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and Z
Green Outlook Nigerian Gen Y and Z
 

Mehr von ProjetoBr

Tutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosTutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosProjetoBr
 
Tutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosTutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosProjetoBr
 
Tutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosTutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosProjetoBr
 
Potencial de uso dos recursos vegetais
Potencial de uso dos recursos vegetaisPotencial de uso dos recursos vegetais
Potencial de uso dos recursos vegetaisProjetoBr
 
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosDiagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosProjetoBr
 
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosDiagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosProjetoBr
 
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosDiagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosProjetoBr
 
Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...
Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...
Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...ProjetoBr
 
Comendo a Amazônia
Comendo a AmazôniaComendo a Amazônia
Comendo a AmazôniaProjetoBr
 
Osmose Reversa X Troca Iônica
Osmose Reversa X Troca IônicaOsmose Reversa X Troca Iônica
Osmose Reversa X Troca IônicaProjetoBr
 
Gestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PR
Gestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PRGestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PR
Gestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PRProjetoBr
 
Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020ProjetoBr
 
Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020ProjetoBr
 
Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009
Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009
Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009ProjetoBr
 
O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...
O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...
O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...ProjetoBr
 
Tecnologia Esgoto
Tecnologia EsgotoTecnologia Esgoto
Tecnologia EsgotoProjetoBr
 
HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...
HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...
HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...ProjetoBr
 
Crise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No Brasil
Crise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No BrasilCrise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No Brasil
Crise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No BrasilProjetoBr
 
Sistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e Renda
Sistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e RendaSistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e Renda
Sistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e RendaProjetoBr
 
Renewable energy country attractiveness indices
Renewable energy country attractiveness indicesRenewable energy country attractiveness indices
Renewable energy country attractiveness indicesProjetoBr
 

Mehr von ProjetoBr (20)

Tutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosTutorial Vídeos
Tutorial Vídeos
 
Tutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosTutorial Vídeos
Tutorial Vídeos
 
Tutorial Vídeos
Tutorial VídeosTutorial Vídeos
Tutorial Vídeos
 
Potencial de uso dos recursos vegetais
Potencial de uso dos recursos vegetaisPotencial de uso dos recursos vegetais
Potencial de uso dos recursos vegetais
 
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosDiagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
 
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosDiagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
 
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos UrbanosDiagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
Diagnóstico do Manejo de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos
 
Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...
Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...
Unidades de conservação no Brasil : o plano estrategico nacional de areas pro...
 
Comendo a Amazônia
Comendo a AmazôniaComendo a Amazônia
Comendo a Amazônia
 
Osmose Reversa X Troca Iônica
Osmose Reversa X Troca IônicaOsmose Reversa X Troca Iônica
Osmose Reversa X Troca Iônica
 
Gestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PR
Gestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PRGestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PR
Gestão de Canais Reversos de Captação de Resíduos: O Câmbio Verde em Curitiba/PR
 
Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020
 
Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020Ser for 2020
Ser for 2020
 
Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009
Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009
Pesquisa G8 Climate Socrecards 2009
 
O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...
O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...
O mercado mundial de biocombustíveis na expansão da Agricultura Brasileira e ...
 
Tecnologia Esgoto
Tecnologia EsgotoTecnologia Esgoto
Tecnologia Esgoto
 
HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...
HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...
HEMAGLUTININA DE FOLHAS DE MANDIOCA (Manihot esculenta Crantz): PURIFICAÇÃO P...
 
Crise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No Brasil
Crise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No BrasilCrise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No Brasil
Crise Financeira, Energia E Sustentabilidade No Brasil
 
Sistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e Renda
Sistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e RendaSistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e Renda
Sistemas Agroflorestais e Reflorestamento para Captura de Carbono e Renda
 
Renewable energy country attractiveness indices
Renewable energy country attractiveness indicesRenewable energy country attractiveness indices
Renewable energy country attractiveness indices
 

Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the Environment

  • 1. Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the Environment – A Worldwide Tracking Survey HIGHLIGHTS REPORT May 2009
  • 2. I NT RO D UC TI O N National Geographic conducted its inaugural Greendex survey in January 2008. At the time, the economy was strong, although growth was beginning to slow. Countries like India and China had recently experienced unprecedented prosperity. New wealth was being created and the middle class was growing. Meanwhile, the environment had recently been polling at unprecedented levels as an issue of public concern. Climate change and global warming had become household concepts as consumers’ knowledge improved. That first Greendex survey of 14 countries around the world ranked average consumers in those countries according to the environmental sustainability of their behavior. Consumers in the large developing economies of Brazil, India and China scored highest, while Canadians and Americans, with their relatively massive environmental footprints, scored lowest. The 2008 findings raised concerns about what economic development and the material aspirations that come with it would mean for the impact that the average consumer in rapidly developing countries has on the environment. At the same time, the results reminded us that consumers in wealthy countries have a proportionately greater impact on the environment than others— and that they can and should make more sustainable choices. The world has changed since January 2008. Following what was an extremely volatile year by many measures, National Geographic replicated its Greendex survey in January 2009. How has consumer behavior changed from one year ago? And if it has changed, why? In what environmental direction are we headed? The following is an interpretive summary of Greendex 2009: Consumer Choice and the Environment—A Worldwide Tracking Survey. 2
  • 3. The Greendex is a comprehensive measure of consumer behavior in 65 areas relating to housing, transportation, food and consumer goods. Greendex 2009 ranks average consumers in 17 countries—up from 14 in 2008 for which changes are tracked—according to the environmental impact of their discretionary and nondiscretionary consumption patterns within these four major categories. Each respondent earned a score reflecting the environmental impact of his or her consumption patterns within each, and four corresponding “sub-indices” were created. Consumers were then assigned an overall Greendex score (a measure of the relative environmental sustainability of their consumption patterns) out of 100, based on their performance within the four sub-indices. G RE E NDE X 2 00 9: O V E RALL R E S U LT S In their second annual survey to measure and monitor consumer behaviors that have an impact on the environment, the National Geographic Society and the international polling firm GlobeScan have found an increase in environmentally friendly consumer behavior in 13 of the 14 countries that were surveyed in both 2008 and 2009. Consumption as measured by the Greendex is determined both by the choices consumers actively make — such as repairing rather than replacing items, using cold water to wash laundry, choosing green products rather than environmentally unfriendly ones — and choices that are controlled more by their circumstances — such as the climate they live in or the availability of green products or public transport. The research considers both of these types of factors, with 60 percent of the 65-variable index based on choice or discretionary behavior. As seen last year, the top-scoring consumers of 2009 are in the developing economies of India, Brazil and China. Argentina and South Korea, both new additions to the survey, are virtually tied for fourth, followed by Mexicans, Hungarians and Russians. Ranks ninth through thirteenth, the latter a three-way tie, are all occupied by Europeans, as well as Australians in twelfth. Japanese, U.S. and Canadian consumers again score lowest. 3
  • 4. Much of the increase in the overall 2009 Greendex scores was due to higher scores within the category of housing, where the index measures the energy and resources consumed by people’s homes. Changes within the categories of personal transportation, food and consumer goods were mixed, with some up and some down. Findings within each of these four categories are described in more detail below. First conducted in 2008, the Greendex survey was expanded in 2009, with the addition of Argentina, South Korea and Sweden to Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, India, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Spain and the United States. Seventeen thousand consumers were polled online (1,000 in each country), answering questions that measured their behavior in the areas of housing, transportation, food and consumption of goods. An examination of the degree of change in Greendex scores reveals some interesting clusters of countries. Consumers registering the best year- on-year improvement in environmentally sustainable consumer behavior are the Spanish, Germans, French and Australians, while Russians and Mexicans show the smallest increase. Brazilians are the only consumers measured in 2008 and 2009 to show a decrease in their Greendex score. The results suggest that both cost considerations and environmental concerns may have motivated consumers to adopt more environmentally sustainable behavior over the past year, hence the general increase in Greendex scores. The 2009 Greendex survey has identified a number of types of environmentally friendly behavior that have become more common, and many of these result in cost savings for consumers. For example consumers in 11 of the 14 countries surveyed in 2008 and 2009 are more likely this year to report that they keep their heating and cooling settings in their households lower to save energy. The practice of washing laundry in cold water rather than hot to save energy has also become more widespread in nine countries surveyed in both years. Preference for buying second-hand rather than new household items has become more widespread, as has as the preference for repairing broken items to extend their useful lives. 4
  • 5. The survey asked consumers whether they had reduced the consumption of energy in their homes over the past year, and whether they reduced the amount of fuel they consumed in their motorized vehicles. In both cases, those who said that they had reduced energy and fuel consumption were asked why. Cost is by far the most frequent explanation offered for the reduction, with between eight and nine in ten consumers selecting cost as one of their top two reasons. In comparison, between three and four in ten say that their environmental concerns were one of the top two motives for the reduction. It appears, then, that cost was an important factor behind this year’s increase in consumers’ Greendex scores. Given the current recession, this interpretation is all the more credible. But, concern about the environment likely played a role as well. At the beginning of 2008, environmental concern and engagement among the public was higher than it perhaps had ever been, and many programs and initiatives by governments and companies were put in place as a result. The severity of the economic slowdown was not yet fully yet anticipated. While the economy is by far the most top-of-mind national issue measured on our 2009 survey, overall concern about the environment is down only slightly from a year earlier. 5
  • 6. This environmental concern is reflected in consumer behavior. For example, the percentage of consumers who say they buy certain products specifically because they are better for the environment than other products, an action unlikely to consistently result in savings to the consumer, increased in five countries in 2009, and decreased in only one. Air pollution, climate change/global warming and water pollution rank fourth through sixth on a list of 12 global concerns, just behind the economy, fuel costs and poverty. Roughly two-thirds of consumers say they are concerned about each of these environmental issues. Six in 10 consumers across the 17 surveyed countries agree that people need to consume less in order to improve the environment for future generations (only 12 percent disagree), showing that consumers recognize the connection between their actions and the environment. The notion of reinforcing co-benefits is perhaps a useful one when weighing the relative impact of the economy and environmental concerns on consumer behavior. Consumers increasingly realize that they can save money and help the environment at the same time, and they want to do both. However, Brazilians, Russians and Mexicans, who increased their Greendex score from 2008 the least, share a number of characteristics that may discourage green consumer behavior. Consumers in these countries are more likely than others to believe that environmental problems are so severe that there is little they, as individuals, can do about them. In other words, they lack a feeling of empowerment when it comes to the environment. This belief has grown in all three of these countries since 2008, yet it has decreased in Germany, where Greendex scores have improved more than in other countries. HO USI NG The housing sub-index measures things like the size of one’s residence relative to the number of inhabitants, home heating and cooling, retrofits that increase efficiency, the purchase of renewable energy, the use of energy-efficient major appliances, and water usage. In all, the sub-index includes 24 different variables. 6
  • 7. Consumers in all surveyed countries registered significant improvements in their 2009 housing scores, accounting for a large portion of the increases in the overall Greendex scores. Brazilians, Indians and Mexicans again top this sub-index, as they did in 2008. Countries in which the average consumer’s housing score improved most notably are India, China, Mexico, Spain and France. U.S. consumers, who earned the lowest housing scores, also improved from 2008, but by a smaller margin than all other consumers surveyed. British and Japanese consumers also exhibit such a pattern. People in developing countries score higher in this area in part because they generally have smaller residences and use less energy in their homes, often not needing home heating. This year’s survey found that since 2008, consumers across many countries are now more likely to engage in energy-saving activities, such as adjusting thermostat settings (up in 11 countries), minimizing their use of fresh water (up in nine countries), and washing laundry in cold water to save energy (up in nine countries). This is due to both cost and environmental considerations. For example, when the three in ten consumers who say they reduced their consumption of energy for heating or cooling their homes over the past year are asked why they did so, eight in ten say that cost was one of the top two reasons. Four in ten say that their environmental concerns were behind the change in behavior. Thus, regardless of the motivation, some consumer behavior as measured by the Greendex survey has shifted in ways that benefit the environment. Another factor behind the increase in Greendex scores is the increase in ownership of energy efficient appliances, as some consumers have replaced their older, less efficient units with newer, often more efficient ones. Televisions are a good example, with more efficient LCD or plasma screens becoming more common. The percentage of consumers reporting that their household contains an efficient television is up in seven countries from last year, and by five points overall. This and other examples represent cases where industry has provided consumers with products that help them reduce their environmental footprint, and consumers have enthusiastically embraced them. 7
  • 8. Brazilians continue to be much more likely than other consumers to purchase renewable or “green” electricity (Brazil has invested heavily in energy production from biomass), and this year consumers in two other emerging economies, India and Mexico, have shown increases in “green” electricity purchases. Argentineans, Russians and Mexicans are the most likely to report installing energy-saving appliances in the past year. Canadians, Russians and Argentineans are more likely than others to have sealed drafts in their homes, installed thermal windows, or installed or upgraded insulation this past year. TRAN S P O RT A TI O N The transportation sub-index measures things like the ownership and driving of motorized vehicles, including their size as an approximation of fuel efficiency, the frequency of air travel, the use of public transportation and trains, as well as the frequency of walking or cycling as one’s primary means of transportation. In all, 17 variables are included in the transportation sub-index. Overall, scores are flat or down on this sub-index from last year. Consumers who show the biggest drop in transportation scores live in India, Brazil, China, Mexico, Russia, Canada and the United States. Despite this drop, Chinese consumers scored highest overall in the transportation sub-index, followed by Argentineans and Indians. Greendex transportation scores fell less (or remained essentially level) in Spain, Australia, Germany and Britain. Australians, Canadians and Americans again occupy the bottom of the ranking this year. Transportation-related behavior is generally more environmentally friendly in developing countries where consumers tend more than others to walk, cycle or use public transportation, or choose to live close to their most common destination. Russians, Chinese and South Koreans are most likely to use public transportation regularly, while Australians, Canadians and especially Americans are the least likely to say that they do. Despite their generally more environmentally friendly transportation behaviors, consumers in developing countries saw the sharpest decline in 2009, perhaps as a result of peak prosperity in early to mid-2008. In China, for example, car ownership is less common than in other 8
  • 9. countries, but it is increasing. Further, fewer Chinese this year than last report walking or riding a bike frequently to their most common destinations. When asked whether they intend to acquire a new or used motorized vehicle in the coming year, Indians, Brazilians, Mexicans and Chinese, in that order, are the most likely to say they probably will. When asked to reflect on the past year, many consumers report that they decreased their vehicle fuel consumption. When asked why, most (seven in ten) say that cost was one of their top two reasons. Three in ten say that their environmental concern was one of the main reasons for their decreased fuel consumption. Among motorized vehicle drivers only, between three and eight in 10 across the countries surveyed agree that increased fuel prices caused at least a temporary change in their transportation habits. Among U.S. drivers who say they changed their transportation habits because of higher fuel prices, 85 percent say they have reduced how much they drive. Among Chinese consumers who say they have changed their transportation habits due to fuel prices, 85 percent say they have increased the amount they bike or walk. However, among all consumers surveyed in China, the percentage who walk or bike 9
  • 10. frequently appears to be down from last year. Asked why they do not take public transportation more often, consumers most often cite availability and efficiency as the reasons. Additionally, Indian and Russian consumers claim public transportation is too crowded, Japanese attribute low usage of public transit to high cost and Mexican consumers point to safety considerations. Of all the four sub-indices, the 2009 transportation sub-index reveals the least progress from 2008, with scores in fact level or down. Transportation practices may indeed be the most difficult for individual consumers to alter, with few available alternatives to what their infrastructures offer. FO O D The food index comprises eight variables including the frequency of consumption of locally produced foods, foods grown or raised by oneself, fruits and vegetables, beef, chicken, seafood and bottled water. Organic foods are not included in this sub-index due to high variability in the definition and understanding of “organic” from country to country and dispute about whether organic foods shipped a long distance are environmentally superior to locally produced conventional foods. Indians, Australians and South Koreans top this index this year, although Indian consumers’ score has dropped from last year. Countries in which the average consumer’s food score improved the most are Germany, Australia and the United States; those whose consumers’ scores dropped the most are India, Brazil and Hungary. Since 2008, consumers in seven surveyed countries, the United States, Australia, Great Britain, France, Japan, Mexico and Russia, decreased their consumption of bottled water—suggesting that awareness of the environmental issues associated with bottled water consumption issues has increased. Swedes, at just 6 percent, are the least likely to drink bottled water every day. Germans remain the most likely to drink bottled water — 68 percent do so daily. Indian consumers report eating fewer local foods and fruits and vegetables in 2009 than they did in 2008, and increased consumption of imported foods and bottled water. However, their 10
  • 11. Greendex score is bolstered by the fact they eat the least amount of meat and seafood. Consumers in most other countries tend to consume both meat and seafood at least once a week. Americans, British, Germans and Spanish are more likely now than a year ago to consume locally grown foods several times a week or more. This finding perhaps reflects a growing consciousness about food origins, manifested by trends such as the “one-hundred mile diet.” Brazilians and Indians are less likely than last year to eat locally grown foods. Argentineans are the most common eaters of beef, with 66 percent saying they eat it several times a week compared with 8 percent of South Koreans or Hungarians. Mexicans have increased their beef consumption this year; 48 percent say they eat it several times a week compared with 39 percent last year. Ninety percent of Japanese eat fish or seafood at least weekly; just 34 percent of Indians and 25 percent of Hungarians do. G OO DS The goods sub-index measures a mix of everyday consumption habits and preferences, as well as the number of “big- ticket” items included within one’s household, relative to the number of people who live there. Specifically, the index includes the purchase and/or avoidance of specific products for environmental reasons, the preference for reusable consumer goods over disposable products, willingness to pay an environmental premium, recycling practices, and the number of large appliances within one’s household, among other things. All told, the goods sub-index is made up of 16 individual variables. 11
  • 12. Topping this sub-index this year are Indians, South Koreans and Chinese. The biggest year-on- year improvement was recorded by Indians, Russians and French, while Brazilians recorded the biggest drop. The score for the average Chinese consumer also decreased more than for most others. Avoidance of environmentally unfriendly products, a choice that is not necessarily motivated by cost savings, is up among consumers in six countries. Indians, Brazilians and Mexicans show the biggest year- on-year increase in this area. These consumers, along with Chinese, also are the most likely to say they buy environmentally friendly products. Americans, Hungarians, British, Spanish and Japanese are least likely to do so. However, the percentage of consumers who say they choose environmentally friendly products over others has increased in five countries and has decreased in just one (Russia). Consumers in South Korea, Australia, Canada, the United States and many of the European countries surveyed report a decrease in consumption of everyday household goods over the past year. While seven in 10 of those who have reduced consumption of household goods cite cost as one of their main reasons, one-third say environmental concerns were their primary motivating factor. The frequency of recycling has substantially increased in nine of the 14 tracking countries this year, perhaps as result of expanding availability and consumer participation. Consumers in developed countries such as Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, and Spain tend to recycle most often. South Koreans and Russians are the least likely to recycle. Since 2008, the number of consumers who prefer to repair broken items rather than buy new ones has risen in six of the countries, including Canada and the United States, and in emerging economies such as Brazil, China and Mexico. There has also been a rise in the number of consumers who prefer to buy second-hand items rather than new replacements. This increase is observed in nearly half the countries surveyed and is another example of where cost savings and environmental considerations reinforce each other. 12
  • 13. The French remain the most likely to use their own shopping bags, with this behavior up among consumers in 12 of 14 countries where this question was asked last year. The figure is up particularly sharply in China, where free plastic shopping bags were banned at the beginning of 2008, after that year’s Greendex survey was complete—a clear case in which regulation can result in widespread change in consumer behavior. Nearly four times as many Chinese reported using their own shopping bags this year as last. Russians and Americans report the lowest use of their own bags, at one-third each. Swedes are the least likely to prefer disposable household products over reusable items, while Indians, Argentineans, Mexicans and Brazilians say they are most likely to prefer disposable products. CO NCL US IO N Overall, Greendex scores are up from 2008. This is good news. Many will ask the question of whether this is not due to the economic downturn alone. The answer to that question has to be no. Clearly, economic conditions have reined in consumption levels, and that is reflected in the increased Greendex scores. At the same time, however, environmental concerns have remained strong, and awareness of the issues at hand has increased. Consumers have been alerted to what they can do easily, and with cost savings as the needed incentive, they have made choices to do so more than they did during 2008. 13
  • 14. What will happen as the next phase of economic growth, the expansion of the middle class and increased prosperity ensue? Many, especially those in the rapidly developing countries, still aspire to a large home or a nice car. The survey results prove it. The challenge remains to ensure that what we all want is good for us and for future generations, and the priority for industry and government must be to ensure that it is provided. The environmentally positive choices that consumers have made so far have been the easy ones. They have not given up their cars, nor relocated their homes to lessen the impact of their commute to work. The changes have not required a tradeoff of cost or convenience. The message to those that supply the products and services that they consume, and to those that make the rules about how they behave, is a clear one: Make the right thing, provide the right opportunities, and consumers will do the right thing. DI S CO VE R Y O UR G R E E NDE X S CO R E Individuals around the world can find out where they rank on the Greendex scale by visiting nationalgeographic.com/greendex and taking an abbreviated survey. They can also examine the Greendex survey results by country, measure their knowledge of some basic green issues against what others around the world know and get tips on living a more environmentally friendly lifestyle. 14