AbstractThere are many opportunities for consumers to design their lives more sustainably. While a rapidly growing body of literature has investigated how consumers can reduce carbon footprints in key consumption areas, such as food, housing and mobility, an overall framework that allows structuring those options across all consumption areas is still missing. Hence, this paper presents a novel and systematic framework to identify improvement options that promote climate change mitigation and structure them based on their primary mode of impact on GHG emissions. The framework targets consumer practices and focuses on ambitious, but technically and socioeconomically feasible strategies for consumers to lower their carbon footprint. Four major...
Ultimate solutions to climate change problems lie in regulating and controlling the three key secto...
This paper investigates how consumption-based greenhouse gas emissions from private households can b...
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with products and actions are challenging for people to co...
AbstractThere are many opportunities for consumers to design their lives more sustainably. While a r...
There are many opportunities for consumers to design their lives more sustainably. While a rapidly ...
While national climate policy can address countries’ production or consumption, climate mitigation v...
Around two-thirds of global GHG emissions are directly and indirectly linked to household consumptio...
Fighting climate change and its detrimental effects on the environment and the society has become a ...
International audienceCurrent climate policies were developed from a macro-economic approach in a pr...
Carbon footprints associated with consumer food choices substantially contribute to climate change. ...
Carbon footprints aim to engage consumers in contributing to climate‐change mitigation. Consumption‐...
AbstractExisting research shows that lifestyle changes and sustainable consumption play an important...
Carbon footprints – the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with consumer food choices –substa...
In policy and research on sustainable consumption in general, and climate-oriented consumption speci...
The EU Carbon-CAP project assembled a comprehensive portfolio of consumer initiatives in order to as...
Ultimate solutions to climate change problems lie in regulating and controlling the three key secto...
This paper investigates how consumption-based greenhouse gas emissions from private households can b...
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with products and actions are challenging for people to co...
AbstractThere are many opportunities for consumers to design their lives more sustainably. While a r...
There are many opportunities for consumers to design their lives more sustainably. While a rapidly ...
While national climate policy can address countries’ production or consumption, climate mitigation v...
Around two-thirds of global GHG emissions are directly and indirectly linked to household consumptio...
Fighting climate change and its detrimental effects on the environment and the society has become a ...
International audienceCurrent climate policies were developed from a macro-economic approach in a pr...
Carbon footprints associated with consumer food choices substantially contribute to climate change. ...
Carbon footprints aim to engage consumers in contributing to climate‐change mitigation. Consumption‐...
AbstractExisting research shows that lifestyle changes and sustainable consumption play an important...
Carbon footprints – the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with consumer food choices –substa...
In policy and research on sustainable consumption in general, and climate-oriented consumption speci...
The EU Carbon-CAP project assembled a comprehensive portfolio of consumer initiatives in order to as...
Ultimate solutions to climate change problems lie in regulating and controlling the three key secto...
This paper investigates how consumption-based greenhouse gas emissions from private households can b...
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with products and actions are challenging for people to co...