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Who cares about meat carbon footprint? Exploring preferences for credence factors among australian consumers

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posted on 2024-06-14, 04:16 authored by Jeremy De ValckJeremy De Valck, John RolfeJohn Rolfe, Megan StarMegan Star, Darshana Rajapaksa, Michael Burton
In the climate change context, consumers are often urged to reduce meat consumption because of associated greenhouse gas emissions. However, it is unclear if consumers would pay more for meat with lower carbon footprint, among other credence factors. This paper reports one of the first studies to identify willingness-to-pay for meat that has been carbon-footprint-labelled as an attribute. Four discrete choice experiments are conducted about meat preferences for beef, chicken, lamb and pork, on 1,200 Australian respondents. The results show that credence factors remain less important to most consumers than intrinsic meat properties. Carbon footprint is non-significant in the estimated mixed logit models. Latent class analyses reveal that only one (representing 21% of consumers) out of three classes places high importance on carbon footprint.

Funding

Category 2 - Other Public Sector Grants Category

History

Volume

418

Start Page

1

End Page

10

Number of Pages

10

ISSN

0959-6526

Publisher

Elsevier

Additional Rights

CC-BY-NC

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2023-07-17

External Author Affiliations

Queensland Government; University of Western Australia

Author Research Institute

  • Centre for Regional Economics and Supply Chain (RESC)

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of Cleaner Production

Article Number

138157