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Deciding to be green. Laura Carlson, University of Notre Dame Hesburgh Lecture, October 18, 2011 Seton Hill University. Be GREEN. P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail. If printing, consider the double-sided option. Why be green? Shades of green
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Deciding to be green Laura Carlson, University of Notre Dame Hesburgh Lecture, October 18, 2011 Seton Hill University
Be GREEN PPlease consider the environment before printing this e-mail. If printing, consider the double-sided option.
Why be green? • Shades of green • Why is it hard to be greener? • How we make decisions • Applying decision making to green behavior • Green initiatives at Notre Dame • “Deciding to be Green” Class Proposals The Psychology of Being Green
A vast majority (87%) of consumers agree that they are seriously concerned about the environment (Gfk Roper Consulting, Green Gauge Survey, 2007) • Nearly two-thirds (62%) of Americans believe the environment in the United States is getting worse. Just 11% think it is getting better. In 2005, 52% believed the environment was getting worse and 15% thought it was getting better. (Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy, Environment Survey, 2007)
Top 10 Environmental Concerns (From Green to Gold, Esty & Winston, 2009) • Climate Change • Energy • Water • Biodiversity and land use • Chemicals, toxics and heavy metals • Air pollution • Waste management • Ozone layer depletion • Oceans and Fisheries • Deforestation
How green are you? Shades of green
Green Gauge Report (2007) Gfk Roper Consulting • True Blue Greens: Environmental leaders and activists. • Green Back Greens: Do not have time to be completely green and not likely to give up comfort and convenience for the environment, but willing to buy green products. • Sprouts: Environmental "fence sitters" who buy green only if it meets their needs • Grousers: Generally uninvolved and disinterested in green issues; believe individual behavior cannot improve environment. • Apathetics: Not concerned enough about the environment to take action; believe environmental indifference is the mainstream.
Why is it hard to become greener? Thought Traps (Better World Handbook, Jones et al., 2007)
It is not my responsibility It is industry that is responsible for air pollution Car emissions contribute to smog Whose car? Commons Dilemma
One person can’t make a difference that is large enough to matter • Recycling one aluminum can saves enough energy to run a TV for three hours -- or the equivalent of a half a gallon of gasoline. • We use over 80 billion aluminum soda cans every year.
The problems are overwhelming and I don’t know what to do How can I fix the oceans and fisheries? Plastic bags and other plastic garbage thrown into the ocean kill as many as 1,000,000 sea creatures every year
I am not a saint or an activist Recyclying behavior When Convenient Consistently Set up At Home Purchase only Recyclable Products Beginning a Recycling Program at Work Small Impact Large Impact
Let us assume: • You agree there are environmental problems • You want to help • You gather information • You know what you should do This is not enough!
It’s easy being green (Trask, 2006) “Many Americans agree with the goals of the environmental movement. Yet, nearly as many Americans admit to doing little more than recycling when it comes to acting on the disposition.”
Deciding to be green or greener Deciding
Decision to attend = Choice • Cost: Loss of time, energy • Benefit: Education, fulfill an obligation • Choice = assessment of cost/benefit ratio
Is this the same type of decision? • Assessment of cost/benefit ratio? • Decision = reaction to the environment • Comfort of the chair • Direction of the speaker
2 decision making systemsKahneman & Tversky (1981) • Conscious • Take times and effort • Assess cost/benefit – computational • Automatic, largely unconscious • Fast & little effort • Involves mental short-cuts
Which do we use for Green behavior? Buying Soap Buy Tom’s Why? Deciding to be green class Buy Dove Why? My mom did Automatic Conscious
Thought Experiment How many behaviors (choices) we make each hour of each day? It is a very large number…. We don’t want them all to beconscious We can’t have them all be conscious
Why are you sitting in THAT chair? Some behaviors start out as conscious decisions but become automatic
Conscious Decisions What dimensions do people use for assessing cost/benefit?
“My basic principle is that you don’t make decisions because they are easy; you don’t make them because they are cheap; you don’t make them because they’re popular; you make them because they’re right.” – Theodore Hesburgh Former President of Notre Dame
Decision dimensions Easy Cheap Popular Right For each dimension you have a weight (-1 to 1)
Decision dimensions Green Behavior = (E * easy) + (C * cheap) + (P * popular) + (R * right) Your decision depends upon the weights you give to E for Easy C for Cheap P for Popular R for Right
If you are Hesburgh E for easy = 0 C for cheap = 0 P for popular = 0 Right = +1.0 Unplug appliances = (0 * easy) + (0 * cheap) + (0 * popular) + (1.0 * right)
If you are the rest of us E for easy = -1 C for cheap = +1.0 P for popular = -1 R for right = +.5 Unplug = (-1 * easy) + (1.0 * cheap) + (-1 * popular) + (.5 * right) Overall, negative value
How do you change this? For Easy, make it more convenient? Maybe: - 1 -> -.7 For Cheap, maximally cheap – saves money, NO; +1 -> +1 For Popular, you CAN make it more popular; -1 -> +.5 For Right, you CAN raise awareness: + .5 -> + .8 Unplug = overall positive value
Purchase green products Easy –0 (green washing) Cheap – NO (-1.0) Popular – increasingly (+.3) Right – (+ .7) Overall 0; Make it more likely by making it easier (standardized green code) cheaper more popular
www.BetterWorldShopper.com Some tools to help
Conscious decisions – change the decision Automatic decisions – change the environment to shape the decision
Automatic Decisions Nudge: Improving decisions about health, wealth and happiness (Thaler & Sunstein (2009) • Choice architect: • Organize the context in which people make decisions • Cafeteria food display (carrots vs. french fries) • 25% change in choice
Recycle bins larger than garbage cans Programmable thermostat Cold water hookup on washer Double-sided printing add-on …
Office of Sustainability green.nd.edu
University of Notre Dame Geddes Hall - LEED Gold Certification Center for Social Concerns & Institute for Church Life
Power Motionsensor lighting Thermostat set-point LED Lighting Program Dorm Energy Competition College of Science vs. Main Building Energy Challenge
Recycling Single Stream Game Day Recycling Composting &Food Waste Sustainable Office Practices Workshops
Transportation Low Emission Vehicle Preferred Parking Video Conferencing Public Transportation (Free with ID) University Hybrids
Student outreach First year orientation Dorm competitions
GreeND Student Group • Received Energy Patriot Award, 2008 - honors a student, professional, scholar or member of the business community who has demonstrated leadership and initiative in taking concrete action to improve America’s energy security. From 10 to 150 students and 800 subscriptions to email publication • Game-day recycling - Fall, 2008 • 73 tons (146,000 pounds) of recycling collected over six games Lightbulb replacement (1400) http://gogreen.nd.edu/