In this paper we investigate if a pro-environmental framing influences households' stated willingness to accept restrictions on their electricity use. We use a split-sample choice experiment (CE) and ask respondents to choose between their current electricity contract and hypothetical contracts featuring various load controls and a monetary compensation. Our results indicate that the pro-environmental framing have little impact on the respondents' choices. We observe a significant framing eeffect on choices and marginal willingness-to-accept (MWTA) for only a few contract attributes. The results further suggest that there is no significant framing effect among households that engage in different pro-environmental activities
We investigate whether risk, time, environmental, and social preferences affect single family homeow...
When households invest in photovoltaics, they change from being electricity consumers to solar prosu...
Behavioural economics offers insights for environmental policy in cases where neoclassical economic ...
In this paper we investigate if a pro-environmental framing influences households' stated willingnes...
Paper [I] investigates household heterogeneity in valuing electricity contract attributes that inclu...
This paper reports evidence from a field experiment investigating households’ electricity saving beh...
In Australia, a trilemma has emerged among the three stated objectives of energy policy, namely main...
With the increased energy demands which are needed to fuel the human development and economic growth...
Abstract Households’ preferences for attributes of flexible energy demand are not well understood. ...
We report on a discrete choice experiment aimed at eliciting Swedish households’ willingness-to-acce...
There is inconsistency in many people's choice of electricity. When asked, they say they prefer a ‘g...
International audienceWe investigate whether risk, time, environmental, and social preferences affec...
This study looks at potential polycentric solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emission by engaging...
Incentives, both rewards and punishments, are effective instruments that have been embedded in elect...
This paper investigates the willingness to pay of a sample of residents of Bath, England, for a hypo...
We investigate whether risk, time, environmental, and social preferences affect single family homeow...
When households invest in photovoltaics, they change from being electricity consumers to solar prosu...
Behavioural economics offers insights for environmental policy in cases where neoclassical economic ...
In this paper we investigate if a pro-environmental framing influences households' stated willingnes...
Paper [I] investigates household heterogeneity in valuing electricity contract attributes that inclu...
This paper reports evidence from a field experiment investigating households’ electricity saving beh...
In Australia, a trilemma has emerged among the three stated objectives of energy policy, namely main...
With the increased energy demands which are needed to fuel the human development and economic growth...
Abstract Households’ preferences for attributes of flexible energy demand are not well understood. ...
We report on a discrete choice experiment aimed at eliciting Swedish households’ willingness-to-acce...
There is inconsistency in many people's choice of electricity. When asked, they say they prefer a ‘g...
International audienceWe investigate whether risk, time, environmental, and social preferences affec...
This study looks at potential polycentric solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emission by engaging...
Incentives, both rewards and punishments, are effective instruments that have been embedded in elect...
This paper investigates the willingness to pay of a sample of residents of Bath, England, for a hypo...
We investigate whether risk, time, environmental, and social preferences affect single family homeow...
When households invest in photovoltaics, they change from being electricity consumers to solar prosu...
Behavioural economics offers insights for environmental policy in cases where neoclassical economic ...