Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting

There is a generally accepted need to decrease the environmental impact and global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by the food industry. Studies have shown that by altering the consumption patterns of food products, the emissions of GHG can be substantially lowered (Carlsson-Kanyama and Gonzál...

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Autor principal: Matsdotter, Elina
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Economics 2013
Materias:
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author Matsdotter, Elina
author_browse Matsdotter, Elina
author_facet Matsdotter, Elina
author_sort Matsdotter, Elina
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description There is a generally accepted need to decrease the environmental impact and global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by the food industry. Studies have shown that by altering the consumption patterns of food products, the emissions of GHG can be substantially lowered (Carlsson-Kanyama and González, 2009). Climate labeling for food products is an example of a policy instrument recently initiated in many countries in order to inform consumers, influence choices about food consumption and thereby reduce GHG emissions of the industry. Even though the interest in climate labeling schemes is growing all around the world little evidence exist showing that climate labeling schemes are actually an effective policy instrument in mitigating GHG emission in the food industry. There is a recognized need for better understanding of consumer response and demand for climate labels. This is the first study to report results from a randomized controlled field experiment in which the researcher manipulates product labels to estimate demand effects of a climate label across multiple retail stores. The experiment was conducted in a Swedish setting by studying the sales of climate certified milk products, certified according to the standards of a Climate Certification of Food (CCF). This experiment has found that the climate certification has a positive effect on sales of the labeled product. Sales of the climate labeled product rose by 6 percent when the information about the climate certification was provided the consumers. However, the climate label can still only be justified as a policy instrument if the labeling system actually reduces GHG emissions. Another finding in this experiment is that the increase in sales of climate certified milk is due to a substitution effect from mainly organically produced milk, which also has an enhanced environmental quality. This finding suggests that the total environmental impact has not changed much with the information about the climate label provided the consumers.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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publishDate 2013
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spelling RepoSLU58742013-07-10T12:22:39Z Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting Matsdotter, Elina climate labels randomized controlled field experiment GHG emissions carbon labels consumer demand consumer response There is a generally accepted need to decrease the environmental impact and global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by the food industry. Studies have shown that by altering the consumption patterns of food products, the emissions of GHG can be substantially lowered (Carlsson-Kanyama and González, 2009). Climate labeling for food products is an example of a policy instrument recently initiated in many countries in order to inform consumers, influence choices about food consumption and thereby reduce GHG emissions of the industry. Even though the interest in climate labeling schemes is growing all around the world little evidence exist showing that climate labeling schemes are actually an effective policy instrument in mitigating GHG emission in the food industry. There is a recognized need for better understanding of consumer response and demand for climate labels. This is the first study to report results from a randomized controlled field experiment in which the researcher manipulates product labels to estimate demand effects of a climate label across multiple retail stores. The experiment was conducted in a Swedish setting by studying the sales of climate certified milk products, certified according to the standards of a Climate Certification of Food (CCF). This experiment has found that the climate certification has a positive effect on sales of the labeled product. Sales of the climate labeled product rose by 6 percent when the information about the climate certification was provided the consumers. However, the climate label can still only be justified as a policy instrument if the labeling system actually reduces GHG emissions. Another finding in this experiment is that the increase in sales of climate certified milk is due to a substitution effect from mainly organically produced milk, which also has an enhanced environmental quality. This finding suggests that the total environmental impact has not changed much with the information about the climate label provided the consumers. SLU/Dept. of Economics 2013 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/5874/
spellingShingle climate labels
randomized controlled field experiment
GHG emissions
carbon labels
consumer demand
consumer response
Matsdotter, Elina
Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting
title Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting
title_full Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting
title_fullStr Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting
title_full_unstemmed Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting
title_short Consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a Swedish setting
title_sort consumer demand for a certified climate label of milk : evidence from a randomized field experiment in a swedish setting
topic climate labels
randomized controlled field experiment
GHG emissions
carbon labels
consumer demand
consumer response