Abstract

Finland aims to be a carbon-neutral society by the year 2050. We are interested to know on a general level how sustainable living materializes among Finnish people, what is the structure of a sustainable lifestyle in Finland and how do people reason about their everyday behavior choices in the context of sustainability in order to combat climate change. The data (n = 2052) were collected by questionnaire in April 2017. They were corrected by sex, age and residential area to be representative of the population of Finland (18–79 years old). We applied mixed methods. A principal axis factoring was conducted on the 32 variables with orthogonal rotation (varimax). Six factors explained 65.2% of the variance. The respondents were also able to write why they considered the specific variable to be important for them. We classified 2811 reasonings. According to our results, Finns have become conscious of climate change, but carbon reduction has not become mainstream in their everyday life. Circulation and preventing loss of materials show a promising start to a Finn’s sustainable way of living. Recycling has been automated so that it is part of a Finn’s everyday routine and habits. Finns also favor domestic food and products. They are interested in the origin of materials. Essential reasons for that are supporting the local economy and ensuring a good employment rate for the state. Smart, carbon-free mobility is a challenge. Finns seem to estimate that their personal car use is already at the proper level. On the other hand, even one fifth reported consideration of environmental effects when planning holidays.

Highlights

  • The influences on Earth by mankind have become stronger in the last few centuries

  • We were interested to know on a general level how sustainable living materializes among Finnish people, what was the structure of sustainable lifestyle in Finland and how did people argue their everyday behavior choices and decisions in the context of sustainability in order to combat climate change

  • If public engagement is in such a way considered as trivial socio-culturally when combating climate change, this means that one powerful potential for climate leadership and direct impact on collective carbon reduction is lost and immobilized

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Summary

Introduction

The influences on Earth by mankind have become stronger in the last few centuries. Humans are moving further from sustainability than ever before in history [1,2]. About 74% of the observed global warming is due to human activity [3]. Human-incurred changes occur more quickly than do natural planetary changes. Due to this shift, a new geological era has started [4]. The era of the Anthropocene is based on the effect that is caused together with population growth and mainstreaming mass consumption [5]. Sustainable living is an imperative in the era of the Anthropocene because the power of humans is stronger than ever

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