Technology & Innovation

Want to boost green thinking? Apply a little behavioural science

Want to boost green thinking? Apply a little behavioural science
Anonymous Writer

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Today, businesses ignore sustainability and green issues at their peril. According to nearly 40% of our survey respondents (60% in France and 43% in China), consumers today would like to see companies reduce their carbon footprint on products and services. The issue is more important, they say, than designing cheaper, better value or more reliable products. But consumers themselves have a big role to play in reducing greenhouse emissions—not simply in the product choices they make, but in being aware of their own behaviour, especially regarding energy consumption. Encouraging citizens to become greener has not always been easy.

OPower, a US-based company which aims to reduce global carbon emissions, has grown rapidly since its founding in 2007. But the success of the company—which has been feted by Barack Obama and David Cameron—is based entirely on the simplest of premises: a good understanding of human behaviour. "Nearly everyone says saving energy is a good thing," says OPower president and founder Alex Laskey. "But it's not the first thing people worry about when they get up in the morning. The challenge is getting people interested in something that is boring."

OPower works with utility companies to help customers cut down their energy consumption. The firm takes a series of complicated data—from energy meters, local land registries, utilities and other sources—and turns it into easy-to-understand information that allows households to see how much energy they use compared with their neighbours and those in the local community. OPower's presentation of simple bar chart and graphic comparators of energy consumption of customers against their neighbours has proven to be a great motivator to switch off lights and improve insulation. On average, customers with utilities using OPower cut their bills by 2-3% as they try to save more energy and money than their neighbours. Mr Laskey compares the company's methodology to Amazon's. Amazon has more than one million products, but does not email customers random lists of what they can buy. Instead, it looks at what they have previously bought and what they have browsed, and creates a tailor-made list of products customers seem most likely to want to purchase.

OPower is now expanding internationally. First Utility, its UK partner, believes that £400 million could be saved by consumers each year if such a system were deployed on all British households. As Mr Cameron told an audience in 2010, "That sort of behavioural economics
can transform people's behaviour in a way that all the bullying, all the information, all the badgering from government cannot possibly
achieve."

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