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Social Norms and Energy Conservation Beyond the US

Mark Andor, Andreas Gerster, Jörg Peters and Christoph Schmidt

No 18-16, EfD Discussion Paper from Environment for Development, University of Gothenburg

Abstract: The seminal studies by Allcott and Mullainathan (2010), Allcott (2011), and Allcott and Rogers (2014) show that social comparison-based home energy reports (HER) are a cost-effective climate policy intervention in the US. Our paper demonstrates the context-dependency of this result. In most industrialized countries, average electricity consumption and carbon intensity are well below US levels. Consequently, HER interventions can only become cost-effective if treatment effect sizes are substantially higher. For Germany, we provide evidence fromalarge-scale randomized controlled trial that effect sizes are in fact considerably lower than in the US. We conclude by illustrating that targeting highly responsive subgroups is crucial to reach cost-effectiveness and by identifying the few countries in which HERare promising policy instruments.

Keywords: Social norms; energy demand; external validity; randomized field experiments; nonprice interventions. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D12 D83 L94 Q41 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 28 pages
Date: 2018-11-01
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Journal Article: Social Norms and Energy Conservation Beyond the US (2020) Downloads
Working Paper: Social norms and energy conservation beyond the US (2017) Downloads
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