Abstract

Current resident lifestyles pose a significant threat to urban sustainable development. Therefore, low-carbon behavior is receiving increasing attention from scholars and policy makers. Ascertaining residential self-selection is essential in order to study the relationship between the built environment and travel behavior. While several studies have explored the relationship between the urban form, socioeconomic factors, and travel behavior, only a few of them have studied the impact of self-selection on household energy consumption and other forms of consumption, which are also contribute to household carbon emissions. Using large-scale field surveys of 1,485 households and high-resolution images, sourced from Google Maps in 2018, of Zhengzhou city, the present study estimated the low-carbon level of three kinds of behavior: daily energy use at home, daily travel, and daily consumption. The study investigated the influence factors on low-carbon behavior using the hierarchical linear model. We found that residential self-selection impacts both energy use and daily travel. Residents in some built environments consumed less energy at home and contributed less CO2 emissions through daily travel than others. In particular, individual-level variables significantly affected the low-carbon energy use behavior. The female, elderly, highly educated, married, and working-class residents with children had higher levels of low-carbon energy use. Community-level variables significantly affected the level of low-carbon travel and low-carbon consumption. If residents lived in areas with high density, mixed land use, and high accessibility, their travel mode and consumption behavior would entail low carbon emissions. There is a relationship between individual variables and community variables. Different individual attributes living in the same built environment have different impacts on low-carbon behaviors.

Highlights

  • With the acceleration of urbanization and industrialization, carbon emissions attributed to the residential self-selection have become for a significant contributory factor in greenhouse emissions

  • The objective of this study was to ascertain the existence of residential self-selection from two dimensions of cause and effect, and determine the variables of the individual-levels and community-levels, as well as the effects of two-level interaction on various low-carbon behaviors

  • After analyzing a sample of 1485 households in Zhengzhou, we found that residents of Zhengzhou City have residential self-selection, and the residential self-selection has a greater impact on energy use behavior and daily travel behavior

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Summary

Introduction

With the acceleration of urbanization and industrialization, carbon emissions attributed to the residential self-selection have become for a significant contributory factor in greenhouse emissions. What is less well understood is whether the observed patterns of behavior are attributed to the residential built environment itself or to attitude-induced residential self-selection, as a ‘self-selected’ result of individuals’ changes in socioeconomic factors, lifecycles, and attitudes towards life behaviors [4]. Residential self-selection means that people choose residential areas of the specific built environment under the influence of factors such as their socioeconomic factors or their attitude preference levels to select similar behaviors of daily life [1,2,3]. If we do not consider residential self-selection, we will overestimate the impact of the built environment on residents’ daily life behaviors. Low-carbon lifestyles and/or behavior influenced by residential self-selection have been paid significant attention [5,6,7,8]

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