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Impact of different carbon labels on consumer inference

Edenbrandt, Anna Kristina LU ; Asioli, Daniele and Nordström, Jonas (2025) In Journal of Cleaner Production 494.
Abstract

Carbon labelling of food products serves as a demand-side tool with the potential to drive the essential shift in consumption patterns toward reducing climate impact. For carbon labels to influence food choices, they must enable consumers to recognize and adopt purchasing behaviour that lower their climate footprint. While inference plays a critical role in facilitating behavioural change, evidence remains sparse regarding how specific characteristics of carbon labels affect consumers' ability to accurately identify low-carbon products. This study investigates how different carbon labels affect consumers' efficiency in identifying low-carbon-emitting food products. Three labels are evaluated: (i) ‘Digit’ specifies the amount of... (More)

Carbon labelling of food products serves as a demand-side tool with the potential to drive the essential shift in consumption patterns toward reducing climate impact. For carbon labels to influence food choices, they must enable consumers to recognize and adopt purchasing behaviour that lower their climate footprint. While inference plays a critical role in facilitating behavioural change, evidence remains sparse regarding how specific characteristics of carbon labels affect consumers' ability to accurately identify low-carbon products. This study investigates how different carbon labels affect consumers' efficiency in identifying low-carbon-emitting food products. Three labels are evaluated: (i) ‘Digit’ specifies the amount of CO2e-emissions from the production of the product, (ii) ‘Colour-Coded’ label indicates the overall climate impact from A to E, (iii) ‘Logo’ identifies the lowest-emitting products within each product category. Respondents in a survey in the United Kingdom were asked to identify the lowest-emitting food product in a set of tasks. All labels improved accuracy in the tasks when products from the same food category were included. Importantly, in the tasks that included products from different categories, the Digit outperformed both the Colour-Coded and the Logo labels. Notably, the Logo did not improve accuracy compared to no-label tasks. It is important that a carbon label informs about the overall climate impact rather than the within-category performance, should the label help consumers identify changes that contribute to significant reductions in climate impact.

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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Carbon label, Climate information, Consumer inference, Front-of-pack label, Sustainability label
in
Journal of Cleaner Production
volume
494
article number
145020
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85217810102
ISSN
0959-6526
DOI
10.1016/j.jclepro.2025.145020
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Authors
id
a56a7240-c0be-4853-a065-32c9f8ca21b7
date added to LUP
2025-08-05 13:46:45
date last changed
2025-08-05 15:24:42
@article{a56a7240-c0be-4853-a065-32c9f8ca21b7,
  abstract     = {{<p>Carbon labelling of food products serves as a demand-side tool with the potential to drive the essential shift in consumption patterns toward reducing climate impact. For carbon labels to influence food choices, they must enable consumers to recognize and adopt purchasing behaviour that lower their climate footprint. While inference plays a critical role in facilitating behavioural change, evidence remains sparse regarding how specific characteristics of carbon labels affect consumers' ability to accurately identify low-carbon products. This study investigates how different carbon labels affect consumers' efficiency in identifying low-carbon-emitting food products. Three labels are evaluated: (i) ‘Digit’ specifies the amount of CO<sub>2</sub>e-emissions from the production of the product, (ii) ‘Colour-Coded’ label indicates the overall climate impact from A to E, (iii) ‘Logo’ identifies the lowest-emitting products within each product category. Respondents in a survey in the United Kingdom were asked to identify the lowest-emitting food product in a set of tasks. All labels improved accuracy in the tasks when products from the same food category were included. Importantly, in the tasks that included products from different categories, the Digit outperformed both the Colour-Coded and the Logo labels. Notably, the Logo did not improve accuracy compared to no-label tasks. It is important that a carbon label informs about the overall climate impact rather than the within-category performance, should the label help consumers identify changes that contribute to significant reductions in climate impact.</p>}},
  author       = {{Edenbrandt, Anna Kristina and Asioli, Daniele and Nordström, Jonas}},
  issn         = {{0959-6526}},
  keywords     = {{Carbon label; Climate information; Consumer inference; Front-of-pack label; Sustainability label}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{02}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of Cleaner Production}},
  title        = {{Impact of different carbon labels on consumer inference}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2025.145020}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jclepro.2025.145020}},
  volume       = {{494}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}