Thirty-seven products were labelled to indicate embodied carbon emissions, and sales were recorded over a 3-month period. Green (below average), yellow (near average), and black (above average) footprints indicated carbon emissions embodied in groceries. The overall change in purchasing pattern was small, with black-labelled sales decreasing 6% and green-labelled sales increasing 4% after labelling. However, when green-labelled products were also the cheapest, the shift was more substantial, with a 20% switch from black- to green-label sales. These findings illustrate the potential for labelling to stimulate reductions in carbon emissions.
Journal article
Customer response to carbon labelling of groceries
Journal of Consumer Policy: Special issue on Putting Sustainable Consumption into Practice, Vol.34(1), pp.153-160
2011
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Customer response to carbon labelling of groceries
- Creators
- Jerome K Vanclay - Southern Cross UniversityJohn Shortiss - East Ballina FoodworksScott Aulsebrook - Southern Cross UniversityAngus M Gillespie - Southern Cross UniversityBen C Howell - Southern Cross UniversityRhoda Johanni - Southern Cross UniversityMichael J Maher - Southern Cross UniversityKelly M Mitchell - Southern Cross UniversityMark D Stewart - Southern Cross UniversityJim Yates - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Journal of Consumer Policy: Special issue on Putting Sustainable Consumption into Practice, Vol.34(1), pp.153-160
- Identifiers
- 2129; 991012821742902368
- Academic Unit
- Science; School of Environment, Science and Engineering; Forest Research Centre; Faculty of Science and Engineering
- Resource Type
- Journal article