Abstract

The personal carbon trading (PCT) scheme is a policy instrument for reducing downstream carbon emissions and creating a green lifestyle, and a bottleneck hampering its implementation is the behavioral willingness of residents. Due to a pre-existing stimulus-response association, the willingness of residents can be intuitively reflected by their approach–avoidance responses. This study theoretically analyzed the mechanisms for influencing residents’ approach–avoidance responses towards the personal carbon trading scheme based on open-ended interviews, and empirically examined the mechanisms by developing rating scales and conducting questionnaire surveys on urban residents in eastern China. Findings showed that residents’ approach–avoidance responses could be negatively affected by their preference for comfort, whereas they were positively impacted by their ecological values, sense of social responsibility, cognition of the behaviors for carbon emission reduction, and cognition of personal carbon trading. In terms of subjective norms, the culture of environmentalism had a positive effect on residents’ responses to PCT scheme, while the culture of consumerism caused a negative impact on their responses. Furthermore, the perceived behavioral controls of residents partially mediated the relationships between their psychological characteristics and approach–avoidance responses. Finally, primary and pivotal suggestions were proposed for nudging Chinese urban residents towards approaching the personal carbon trading scheme, which provide theoretical support and practical guidance for its implementation.

Highlights

  • The environmental risks and health problems caused by global climate change are of great concern to the whole of society

  • The residents holding approach responses towards the personal carbon trading (PCT) scheme accounted for 74.10% of the total, and the mean value of the avoidance responses (AAR) reached 3.79, which implied that, in general, the residents had an approach response to the PCT scheme

  • It was unexpected that the culture of environmentalism and consumerism prevailed simultaneously in eastern China; both mean values were greater than 3.00

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The environmental risks and health problems caused by global climate change are of great concern to the whole of society. Climatic disasters, such as forest fires, hurricanes, droughts, and heat waves pose serious threats to human infrastructure, safety, and health [1,2]. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change stated that increased carbon dioxide emissions are the largest contributor to global climate change, and these are extremely likely (at least 95% certainty) to be caused by human activities. Su et al (2017) pointed out that about a quarter of the carbon dioxide emissions were attributable to the activities of residents in Singapore [7].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call