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The impact of voluntary sustainability adjustments on greenhouse gas emissions from food consumption – The case of Denmark

Nordström, Jonas LU and Denver, Sigrid (2024) In Cleaner and Responsible Consumption 12.
Abstract
In this study we ask how a range of environmental sustainability adjustments that consumers find it easy to adopt affect the carbon footprint of their food consumption. The study is based on information about real purchases of food products and responses to a questionnaire about the various sustainability adjustments that the study participants apply and their concern about climate change. Based on principal component and regression analysis the results from the study indicate that sustainability adjustments such as organic consumption, buying domestically produced food and eating seasonal produce, as well as concern about climate change, are associated with a reduced carbon footprint from food consumption. The largest reductions were... (More)
In this study we ask how a range of environmental sustainability adjustments that consumers find it easy to adopt affect the carbon footprint of their food consumption. The study is based on information about real purchases of food products and responses to a questionnaire about the various sustainability adjustments that the study participants apply and their concern about climate change. Based on principal component and regression analysis the results from the study indicate that sustainability adjustments such as organic consumption, buying domestically produced food and eating seasonal produce, as well as concern about climate change, are associated with a reduced carbon footprint from food consumption. The largest reductions were found for organic consumers. The results suggested that most committed organic consumers have a carbon footprint that is about one third smaller than that of consumers who seldom buy organic food products. The results also indicate that these voluntary sustainability adjustments are not sufficient to secure conformity with today’s goals for reduced greenhouse gas emissions. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
In this study we ask how a range of environmental sustainability adjustments that consumers find it easy to adopt affect the carbon footprint of their food consumption. The study is based on information about real purchases of
food products and responses to a questionnaire about the various sustainability adjustments that the study participants apply and their concern about climate change. Based on principal component and regression analysis the results from the study indicate that sustainability adjustments such as organic consumption, buying domestically produced food and eating seasonal produce, as well as concern about climate change, are associated with a reduced carbon footprint from food consumption. The largest reductions were... (More)
In this study we ask how a range of environmental sustainability adjustments that consumers find it easy to adopt affect the carbon footprint of their food consumption. The study is based on information about real purchases of
food products and responses to a questionnaire about the various sustainability adjustments that the study participants apply and their concern about climate change. Based on principal component and regression analysis the results from the study indicate that sustainability adjustments such as organic consumption, buying domestically produced food and eating seasonal produce, as well as concern about climate change, are associated with a reduced carbon footprint from food consumption. The largest reductions were found for organic consumers. The results suggested that most committed organic consumers have a carbon footprint that is about one third smaller than that of consumers who seldom buy organic food products. The results also indicate that these voluntary sustainability adjustments are not sufficient to secure conformity with today’s goals for reduced greenhouse gas emissions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Carbon footprint, Greenhouse gas emissions, Food consumption, Consumer behavior, Sustainability actions, Spillover effects, Carbon footprint, Greenhouse gas emissions, Food consumption, Consumer behavior, Sustainability actions, Spillover effects
in
Cleaner and Responsible Consumption
volume
12
article number
100164
pages
13 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85183735450
ISSN
2666-7843
DOI
10.1016/j.clrc.2023.100164
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2e8bf04c-5ad6-4986-af17-d495057dd64d
date added to LUP
2024-01-23 14:45:30
date last changed
2024-03-07 15:26:22
@article{2e8bf04c-5ad6-4986-af17-d495057dd64d,
  abstract     = {{In this study we ask how a range of environmental sustainability adjustments that consumers find it easy to adopt affect the carbon footprint of their food consumption. The study is based on information about real purchases of food products and responses to a questionnaire about the various sustainability adjustments that the study participants apply and their concern about climate change. Based on principal component and regression analysis the results from the study indicate that sustainability adjustments such as organic consumption, buying domestically produced food and eating seasonal produce, as well as concern about climate change, are associated with a reduced carbon footprint from food consumption. The largest reductions were found for organic consumers. The results suggested that most committed organic consumers have a carbon footprint that is about one third smaller than that of consumers who seldom buy organic food products. The results also indicate that these voluntary sustainability adjustments are not sufficient to secure conformity with today’s goals for reduced greenhouse gas emissions.}},
  author       = {{Nordström, Jonas and Denver, Sigrid}},
  issn         = {{2666-7843}},
  keywords     = {{Carbon footprint; Greenhouse gas emissions; Food consumption; Consumer behavior; Sustainability actions; Spillover effects; Carbon footprint; Greenhouse gas emissions; Food consumption; Consumer behavior; Sustainability actions; Spillover effects}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Cleaner and Responsible Consumption}},
  title        = {{The impact of voluntary sustainability adjustments on greenhouse gas emissions from food consumption – The case of Denmark}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clrc.2023.100164}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.clrc.2023.100164}},
  volume       = {{12}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}