Policymakers and firms use behavioral interventions to promote sustainable development in various domains. A correct impact evaluation requires looking beyond the targeted domain and assessing its interactions with similar interventions. Existing evidence in this area is limited, leading to potential misestimation of behavioural interventions and poor guidance on their design. Here, we test the impact of a two-year social information campaign to nudge water conservation through a large-scale randomized controlled trial implemented with a multi-resource company,. We find that the water nudge significantly decreases water and electricity usage, but not that of gas. Spillovers arise for customers who do not receive nudges targeting the other resources. Customers receiving the water report are also significantly less likely to deactivate their gas and electricity contracts, regardless of whether they receive other reports. Our results suggest that multiple nudges strain users’ limited attention and ability to enact conservation efforts. Users’ constraints in attending to multiple stimuli need to be accounted in designing policy interventions to foster sustainable practices.

Widening the scope: The direct and spillover effects of nudging water efficiency in the presence of other behavioral interventions / J. Bonan, C. Cattaneo, G. D'Adda, A. Galliera, M. Tavoni. - In: JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0095-0696. - 127:(2024 Sep), pp. 103037.1-103037.14. [10.1016/j.jeem.2024.103037]

Widening the scope: The direct and spillover effects of nudging water efficiency in the presence of other behavioral interventions

J. Bonan
Primo
;
G. D'Adda;
2024

Abstract

Policymakers and firms use behavioral interventions to promote sustainable development in various domains. A correct impact evaluation requires looking beyond the targeted domain and assessing its interactions with similar interventions. Existing evidence in this area is limited, leading to potential misestimation of behavioural interventions and poor guidance on their design. Here, we test the impact of a two-year social information campaign to nudge water conservation through a large-scale randomized controlled trial implemented with a multi-resource company,. We find that the water nudge significantly decreases water and electricity usage, but not that of gas. Spillovers arise for customers who do not receive nudges targeting the other resources. Customers receiving the water report are also significantly less likely to deactivate their gas and electricity contracts, regardless of whether they receive other reports. Our results suggest that multiple nudges strain users’ limited attention and ability to enact conservation efforts. Users’ constraints in attending to multiple stimuli need to be accounted in designing policy interventions to foster sustainable practices.
social information; spillover effects; resource conservation
Settore ECON-01/A - Economia politica
   NEW TRENDS IN ENERGY DEMAND MODELING
   NEWTRENDS
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   893311

   Global Excellence in Modelling of Climate and Energy
   GEMCLIME
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   681228
set-2024
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1118798
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