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Irish Geography
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Sustainable consumption and governance:reflecting on a research agenda for Ireland
Anna Davies , Frances Fahy , Henrike Rau & Jessica Pape
To cite this article: Anna Davies , Frances Fahy , Henrike Rau & Jessica Pape (2010) Sustainableconsumption and governance: reflecting on a research agenda for Ireland, Irish Geography,43:1, 59-79, DOI: 10.1080/00750771003732664
To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00750771003732664
Published online: 17 May 2010.
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Sustainable consumption and governance: reflecting on a researchagenda for Ireland
Anna Daviesa*, Frances Fahyb, Henrike Rauc and Jessica Papeb
aDepartment of Geography, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland; bSchool of Geography andArchaeology, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland; cSchool of Political Science andSociology, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland
Contemporary consumption represents an archetypal ‘wicked problem’, beinglinked to climate change, biodiversity loss and resource depletion, while alsofunctioning as a cultural signifier and a driver of economic growth andinnovation. The Janus-faced nature of consumption is an important indicatorof the complexity facing those who aspire to encouraging more sustainableconsumption patterns. This paper argues that there are outstanding, and related,areas of contention that need further research in order to generate a morecomprehensive and coherent picture of consumption and how it may be mademore sustainable. In essence attention needs to be paid to the practices ofconsumption, its governance and also how practices and governance interact.This paper examines everyday practices and their regulation in two key areas ofconsumption in Ireland � how we get around (transport) and how we live in ourhomes (heating/cooling, lighting, cleaning and eating) � to identify current gapsin social science research. In conclusion a multi-pronged research framework forapproaching these lacunae is outlined.
Keywords: sustainable development; sustainable consumption; production;governance; environmental policy; Ireland
Introduction
Sustainable consumption has been described by some as the use of goods and
services that meet people’s basic needs and bring a better quality of life while having
only minimal impact on the environment (e.g. Jackson 2006). Undoubtedly the
notion of ‘sustainability’ itself is inherently contestable, and its links with issues of
consumption have triggered significant debates about needs versus wants, quality of
life and degrees of acceptable impact on the environment. In much of the policy
literature, for example, particularly at international and supra-national scales (EU),
sustainable consumption has been allied to sustainable production recognising the
intimate relationship between the two processes. Some have criticised this linking of
consumption and production, arguing that the inclusion of issues of production into
international sustainable consumption debates allows developed countries to shift
attention away from their resource-intensive consumption patterns to more familiar
regulatory arenas. Yet others have welcomed attempts to connect issues of
production with consumption as it draws attention to the global division of labour
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
Irish Geography
Vol. 43, No. 1, March 2010, 59�79
ISSN 0075-0778 print/ISSN 1939-4055 online
# 2010 Geographical Society of Ireland
DOI: 10.1080/00750771003732664
http://www.informaworld.com
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and its effects on consumption patterns in rich and poor countries respectively (e.g.
Allen 1993, Clancy 1993).
International policy documents clearly reflect these tensions and debates. The
first global political agreement on sustainable consumption was Chapter 4 of
Agenda 21 at the Rio Earth Summit which stated that ‘action is needed to promote
sustainable consumption and production that will reduce environmental stress and
will meet the basic needs of humanity’ (UNCED 1992). Following on from this, the
2002 WSSD Conference (UNDSD 2002) in Johannesburg indicated a renewed global
policy focus and the agreement to develop a framework of policies on sustainable
production and consumption (SPC). In addition UNEP have been producing regular
reports on SPC since the beginning of the new millennium (see UNEP 2004) and at
the European level the Lisbon Strategy (EC 2000), the Sustainable Development
Strategy (EC 2001) and the 6th Environment Action Programme (EAP) provide
the broad programme for promoting SPC. Indeed in 2004 the EU Environment
Ministers stated that SPC would be a priority for action (EC 2004) and by 2008 the
European Commission had published the ‘Sustainable Consumption and Production
and Sustainable Industrial Policy Action Plan’ (EC 2008) which suggests measures to
improve the environmental performance of products and to increase the demand for
more sustainable goods and production technologies.
To date, much attention to SPC has focused on the supply side, with initiatives
promoting sustainable technologies for energy generation, materials mining and
processing, and product manufacture. This has been accompanied by ecological
modernisation approaches to social and economic policy making and implementa-
tion which emphasise the role of ‘clean’ technologies and which promote technology
transfer from richer to poorer nations as a key strategy for addressing global
environmental problems and sustainability challenges. Despite these developments,
consumption continues to rise unsustainably and the impact of (over)consumption
continues to pose major governance challenges for public authorities at all levels,
businesses and society as a whole (EEA 2005).It is important to note here that governance is evoked in this context because,
although itself the subject of ongoing contestation within the literature (see Kooiman
2003), consumption practices are affected by more than formal structures of
governmental policy. As with other environmental challenges the ways in which
consumption practices are stimulated, supported and transformed also involves
complex interactions between non-state actors and institutions from the private
sector (e.g. manufacturing companies and retailers), civil society (e.g. consumer and
environmental organisations) as well as the actions of societal groups, households
and individuals (see Jordan et al. 2005 and Davies 2008 for further discussion on
environmental governance debates). While improving the sustainability of produc-
tion processes is undoubtedly important, these measures alone are clearly insufficient
to deal with some of the structural causes and consequences of (over)consumption.
This is exemplified by ‘rebound effects’ which occur when cost savings made through
use of more sustainable products, such as low-energy lightbulbs, are used to purchase
other consumables which themselves create environmental impacts. Thus the energy
and emissions savings gained in one arena are lost in another. Further attention also
needs to be paid to demand management and to the interface between consumption
and production processes. In addition, difficult questions remain regarding how a
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shift towards more sustainable consumption might be measured, encouraged and
governed (Seyfang 2006).
Day-to-day choices made by members of households regarding the purchase and
use of products and services represent a key area in which negotiations over
sustainable practices take place. As a result household consumption, which is defined
by the OECD (2001) as the selection, purchase, use, maintenance, repair and disposal
of any product or services by members of a household, is increasingly being
highlighted as an arena requiring attention (Spangenberg and Lorek 2002, Geyer-
Allely and Zacarias-Farah 2003, Michaelis and Lorek 2004, Tucker et al. 2005).
While there are clearly complex connections between production processes and
consumption practices, and while individual behaviour is constrained by historical,
social and cultural conditions, the combined impact of households continues to be a
major cause of environmental pressures. Household consumption in the EU grew by
one-third between 1990 and 2002, and research has suggested that it will continue to
grow over the next 25 years unless action is taken (OECD 2001, EEA 2005). It
remains to be seen how the current economic recession will affect these projections.Although some attempts have been made to advance household consumption
analyses internationally (see Quist et al. 2001, Trentmann 2007), research in this
critical sector of sustainable development is still in its infancy in Ireland, both North
and South. This said, recent social-scientific work by Pender et al. (2007) and Doran
(2007) examines the emergence of embryonic sustainable consumption policy in
Ireland and shows that specific action in progressing sustainable consumption policy
has been very limited to date. These authors also observe that responsibility for
policy on sustainable consumption, general product labelling and environmental
claims remains dispersed across various Government departments, which signifi-
cantly limits the effectiveness of such policies. Within Ireland the majority of projects
have focused on sites of consumption outside the home such as swimming pools and
shopping centres, or within businesses and local authorities, and on general
calculations of consumption patterns through resource flow analysis or ecological
footprinting (Sustainable Northern Ireland 2007, Lammers et al. 2008, EPA 2009).
There is a need to extend this initial work to examine more broadly the context in
which sustainable household consumption and mobility are enacted. Responding to
this need this paper is divided into two main sections. The first provides a review of
sustainable consumption issues. Initially we examine the tools that have been
developed to indicate trajectories towards (or indeed away from) sustainable
consumption and to provide information to incentivise behavioural change.
Subsequently we focus on the behavioural dynamics of consumption and the links
between consumption behaviour and quality of life. Ultimately, we argue that more
attention needs to be paid to both the practices and governance of consumption �where governance is the sum of ways that affairs are managed (Latham 1999) � in
particular contexts.
The second main section of this paper provides a sectoral analysis of
consumption practices and governance in Ireland. Here we consider two key areas
of resource-intensive consumption, everyday household practices (how we live) and
mobility issues (how we move around), and identify areas in need of further research.
In conclusion we propose that problem-centred transdisciplinary research that links
consumption, environment and sustainability through innovative methodologies,
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stakeholder dialogue and reflexive modes of governing could help increase the
sustainability of consumption.
Measuring and managing consumption
Establishing goals and measuring outcomes within the complex arena of sustainable
consumption is fraught with difficulties, which often resemble barriers in other areas
of sustainable development (see Bell and Morse 2003, Wheeler 2004). Defining
appropriate indicators, agreeing benchmarks and setting reasonable targets for
sustainability can be problematic, particularly across scales and in different contexts.
When it comes to measuring consumption, which often has multifaceted drivers and
impacts, there are even more densely woven problems related to aggregation.Potential indicators of sustainable consumption, for example measures of the level of
waste recycling or the modal split of passenger transport, frequently appear in state
of the environment reports and sustainable development strategies (for example see
EPA 2006). However, there is generally little analysis of how sustainable consump-
tion in toto might be measured or evaluated and whether it can be simply aggregated
from individual indicators, such as recycling or public transport, or whether there are
cumulative or indirect impacts that aggregation cannot capture (Noland and Lem
2002).A number of sustainability accounting tools, such as Ecological Footprinting and
Life-Cycle Analysis (LCA), have been developed to address the problem of
aggregation. Such tools are central to many attempts to measure the impact of
particular socio-spatial forms (such as communities, cities and even nations) or to
compare the resource intensity of specific products (e.g. plastic or paper cups). The
appropriateness and accuracy of these tools has been subject to intense debate and
criticism (Ayres 2004, McManus and Haughton 2006). Ecological Footprinting, for
example, starts from the assumption that it is possible to objectively know andquantify what makes consumption unsustainable. However, the precise numeric
values which are the result of footprinting measures conceal the various debates over
what should and should not be measured, how it is measured, and even if it is
measurable (Haberl et al. 2001, Hinton and Goodman forthcoming). The lack of
a uniform approach to footprinting (Wiedman and Minx 2008) leads to variability
in footprint size even for the same place or product, indicating measurement and
comparability problems. LCA techniques and carbon calculators reveal similar
problems (Padgett et al. 2008, Reap et al. 2008).While proponents of sustainability accounting tools often recognise the limita-
tions of their methodologies in terms of accuracy, they frequently claim that these
mechanisms have a second, equally significant purpose, namely to raise awareness of
impacts (Stoeglehner and Narodoslawsky 2008). Under this second remit, the precise
accuracy of figures is seen as secondary to the communicative role of the tool, that is,
to raise awareness and to instigate a change in people’s behaviour. In other words, the
provision of information through sustainability accounting mechanisms is seen as an
awareness raising tool in itself. Of course the role of information in changingbehaviour has long been debated in the environmental policy world (see Blake 1999,
Owens 2000).
While information is certainly a necessary component of any strategy for moving
towards more sustainable levels of consumption, there is ample evidence that
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behavioural change without attention to wider structural, societal and personal
factors proves problematic (Burgess et al. 2002, Dolan 2002, Hinton and Goodman
forthcoming). In fact, overly simplistic information-attitude-behaviour models that
anticipate a linear path from the provision of information to attitudinal change toappropriate (and consistent) behaviour patterns have been challenged by recent
theoretical and empirical work on sustainable consumption (see Princen 1999, Ropke
1999, Burgess et al. 2003). For example, Gatersleben and Vlek (1998) argue that any
assumed causal link between attitudes and behavior is mediated by cognitive
processes, including social and cultural norms, beliefs and values, as well as
contextual factors such as the level of technological innovation. Others have focused
on the role of the policy-making environment (Doran 2007).
In the field of environmental psychology, a range of factors has been identified todirectly affect pro-environmental behaviour, including personal moral convictions,
prevailing social norms, attitudes and behavioural controls. Problem awareness
(through information streams), on the other hand, has been shown to only indirectly
influence environmental behaviour (Bamberg 2003, Bamberg and Moser 2007). The
issue of behaviour and behavioural change is addressed in more detail in the next
section.
While accounting tools such as ecological footprinting can be useful for
monitoring changing patterns of consumption, they yield little information aboutthe underlying reasons why patterns both emerge and evolve. For example, the
presence of rebound effects, arising from increased demand for household
appliances, carbon-intensive travel, foreign holidays and imported foods, highlight
the need for careful analysis of social, political and cultural influences on consumer
behaviour in both developing countries with ‘emerging markets’ and mature market
economies like Ireland. Equally, people’s responses to both fiscal and non-material
incentives for sustainable consumption such as eco-taxes, grants, or information
campaigns based on moral, ethical and emotional appeals deserve greater examina-tion by social scientists. Measuring consumption patterns without attending to the
means and motivations that underpin them is only a partial response to the challenge
of sustainable consumption.
Complexity of consumption behaviour
It is commonly held that progressing sustainable consumption requires improved
understanding of consumer behaviour and attitudes (OECD 2001). However,
understanding consumer behaviour is a complex issue not least because of the
many underlying factors which influence consumption including: economic,
political, socio-technical, sociological and socio-psychological.
Political
It is a commonly articulated policy position that all parts of society must participate
in the sustainability project (EPA 2007b). Participation in sustainable consumptionpractices is no exception � however, an implementation deficit remains where policy
pronouncements on acceptable behaviour and actual behavioural dynamics are not
yet aligned. This mismatch provides the stimulation for policy interventions from
diverse spheres of governance (including public, private and civil society). One such
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approach to shaping consumption behaviour focuses on information provision,
through sustainability accounting tools, general public awareness campaigns and
eco-labelling of products. The mechanisms within this approach have the advantage
of being advisory rather than coercive and are generally positively received byintended audiences as long as the information is perceived to be accurate,
comprehensible, comparable and trustworthy. This has led to a proliferation of
campaigns in Ireland over the last decade including Race against Waste (waste
management), Notice Nature (biodiversity) and The Power of One (energy and
climate change). In addition, eco-labelling has been introduced in certain product
sectors, including government-led energy ratings for dishwashers, fridges and freezers
and labelling efforts driven by partnerships between non-governmental associations
and the private sector in areas such as sustainable wood products (see Jordan et al.
2004 and Dingworth 2008; for an overview on the practice of eco-labelling in the
Irish context see Pender et al. 2007). These campaigns, however, have been criticised
for adopting an overly simplistic information deficit model. There is also a difficulty
in discerning direct cause-effect relationships between these campaigns and any
behavioural change (Davies 2003).
Economic
Economic mechanisms have a dichotomous role in consumption debates in terms of
contribution to causing environmental damage and also attempting to mitigate
environmental damage. Economic development has traditionally been associated
with improving productively, reducing product process, increasing personal incomes
in additional to increasing the purchasing power of individuals (UNDP 2008).
However, market-based initiatives are increasingly being used in the environmental
arena.
A key approach to behavioural change is the use of fiscal measures to promote orpenalise unsustainable behaviour. De Young (1993) classifies monetary reinforce-
ment (such as deposit systems for beverage cans or contests for participation in
recycling schemes) and monetary disincentives (including consumption-based taxes)
as positive and coercive motivational techniques that make behaviour more or less
appealing. The role of material (dis)incentives in shaping consumption in particular
has given rise to extensive research (De Young 1993, Karp 1996, Price 2001). Indeed,
economic measures such as taxing, pricing, or direct charges have been proposed as
efficient means of forcing people to shift to more sustainable forms of behaviour(Linden and Carlsson-Kanyama 2003). A levy on plastic bags has already been
introduced within Ireland. A recent European survey estimates that this has reduced
consumption of plastic bags by 92%, yielding over 12.7 million Euros in 2003 (UNEP
2004). With such evidence in the public domain, it is unsurprising that the levy has
been used by government as a flagship indicator of the efficiency and effectiveness of
using financial measures to create change. Yet while the reduction of plastic bags in
Ireland following the levy may well be startling, it is not clear what environmental
costs have been generated elsewhere as a result, nor is it certain what level of plasticbag usage is considered sustainable. Equally, it is not obvious that the success in
terms of regulating plastic bag usage will be replicated in other areas, nor that all
taxes or charging mechanisms are so simple to implement effectively. The pay-by-use
waste charging scheme in Ireland, for example, seems to be generating more recycling
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but levels of waste reduction are not as high as might be expected based on
international evidence. Concerns about socially regressive impacts of the pricing
mechanisms also remain (Davies and O’Callaghan-Platt 2008).
Socio-technical
Recent advances in technology have lead to a proliferation of more efficient products.
It has been argued that such advances can create new markets for consumption;however at the same time such technological advances have also been heralded for
attempting to mitigate problems with increasing consumption patterns, e.g. devel-
opment in information technology provides opportunities for substituting long haul
business flights with video conferences.
At the heart of the approaches to behavioural change detailed above is the
assumption that many environmental impacts derive from ‘generalised behaviour
patterns’ (EPA 2007b, p. 5). However, this assumption has been criticised for its
narrow, rationalistic understanding of the causes and consequences of humanactions, attitudes, routines and habits (Shove 2003; Shove et al. 2007) and for
obscuring complex relationships between technological and social innovation (Green
and Vergragt 2002). As Hobson (2003), Shove (2003) and many others argue,
consumption behaviours such as shopping, heating, washing and driving a car are
socio-technical practices that reflect shared social norms, values and goals (for
example, individual freedom, convenience and safety) which often overshadow
environmental concerns. Negative environmental behaviours are often disguised as
‘forms of inconspicuous consumption’ (Hobson 2003, p. 102) that reflect tensions inmodern society between the rejection of wasteful behaviour and the desire for new
things (Arkes and Hutzel 1997, p. 154). While financial considerations may influence
people’s decisions to some degree, they may well not override other socially
embedded desires. The elasticity of demand for some consumer goods as well as
ideologically motivated expectations for freedom of choice or unlimited spatial
mobility all cast doubt over whether people can be persuaded to act in more
environmentally and socially responsible ways, even if they do express environmental
concern (Jackson 2006).1
Sociological and socio-psychological
Socio-psychological drivers for consumption can include a range of factors fromthe influences of the social environment to personal motivations (UNEP 2004).
Consumers purchase products as much for their symbolic role as their function and
practical qualities (Jackson 2006) and indeed such products can be perceived as
a measure of success and happiness.
Questions have been raised about the fairness of interventions attempting to
shape behaviour as well as their effectiveness in bringing about meaningful and
lasting behavioural change. Several studies (reviewed in Guagnano et al. 1995) have
suggested that while such fiscal incentives can play a valuable role in initiatingbehaviour changes, prolonged transformations in behaviour require intrinsic
motivation, that is, motivation which comes from inside an individual rather than
from any external force. Others have suggested that focusing on individual
consumption behaviour ignores the social nature of consumption and wider
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structural forces that affect people’s choices (Wilhite and Lutzenhiser 1999, Cohen
and Murphy 2001). Yet others have criticised these ‘citizen-as-consumer’ models for
failing to challenge assumptions about the inherent benefits of (over)consumption
and economic growth for individual well-being and quality of life (Gatersleben 2001,
Rugkasa et al. 2007, Woodcock et al. 2007, Fahy and O Cinneide 2008). Indeed
proponents of sustainable development often suggest that the maintenance, and even
improvement, of quality of life for all is essential to its programme (Meister and Japp1998). This reflects a pragmatic perspective, as measures to promote sustainable
development are unlikely to be widely supported if they are perceived to impinge too
severely on the perceived benefits of comfort, cleanliness and convenience that
modern life has brought to many in developed countries (Bell and Morse 2003).
However, the assumption that direct linkages always exist between increased
consumption, better health and improved quality of life is also being challenged
(Jackson 2005, 2006).2
As regards food consumption (and particularly fast food consumption), alarming
messages about levels of obesity and health concerns in western societies clearly
indicate an inversion of the presumed win-win relationship between consumption and
health. Of course it is not simply eating more poor quality food that is the problem;
there are related issues such as reduced levels of exercise due to increased car usage and
labour-saving appliances. More indirectly, greater consumption of resources can lead
to pressures on systems of supply (e.g. water) or systems of management (e.g. waste),
which in turn can degrade the environment and lead to health fears and a reducedquality of life for those affected. A key problem here is that it may not be those who
generate most stresses on the environment through consumption who end up being
affected by the consequences of their actions. Inequities can occur across space, at
different scales and through time (Davies 2006). Fairness and equity issues are thus
central to sustainable consumption matters; whether sustainable consumption policies
are seen as (un)just or (un)fair will influence people’s reaction to them now and in the
future. Unmet mobility needs as well as fuel and food poverty continue to concern both
consumers and governments alike (Healey 2004, McDonagh 2006, Shaw 2006,
Molcho et al. 2007, Rau and Hennessy 2009).
Debates about consumption, health and well-being reveal many tensions and
contradictions. Some argue that being able to consume at will permits the
satisfaction of wants and needs which ensures a sense of fulfilment and a good
quality of life. This contrasts with contributions by social scientists that challenge
uncritical assumptions of a positive link between (consumer) choice and fulfilment,
including recent work on the ‘paradox of choice’ (Schwartz 2004). Amongst other
factors the conflation of quality of life with economic standard of living ignores thenon-material qualities that also contribute to a sense of self and social identity. Soper
and Thomas (2006) argue strongly for more attention being given to the benefits of
alternative ways of living and consuming. Similarly Jackson’s (2009) radical agenda
setting discussions in Prosperity without Growth makes a convincing case for
alternative conceptions of positive societal and environmental development.
Especially in times of global economic crises, the challenge is to combine
questions of economic growth with the broader goals of achieving sustainable
development and consumption. Jackson (2009) addresses this question by arguing
that two components will be necessary to change this dilemma, which he calls ‘. . . the
biggest challenge ever faced by human society’ (Jackson 2009, p. 158). First, he
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suggests to ‘fix the economics’ by developing a new type of macro economics which
should place economic activity within ecological limits and at the same time reduce
the structural reliance on consumption growth by finding a different mechanism to
achieve stability. Second, he suggests to ‘shift the social logic of consumerism’ byproviding real, credible alternatives through which people can act more sustainably.
These alternatives should go beyond making basic systems of provision more
sustainable but should rather provide capabilities for people to ‘participate fully in
the life of society, without recourse to unsustainable material accumulation and
unproductive status competition’ (Jackson 2009, p. 158). Acknowledging the
dilemma that ongoing economic growth is unsustainable but that declining economic
growth might lead to political and societal instability, Jackson develops ideas and
concepts on how a ‘ecological macroeconomic model’ incorporating limits of a finiteearth might look like (see Jackson 2009, pp. 121�142).
At the same time, particular ways of living (and consuming) are robustly
engraved into structures of society and tend to resist transformation, even when
people recognise them as damaging. The persistent problem of car dependency and
its social and material consequences for Irish society illustrates this. The availability
of funds to engage in consumption remains a central issue. As mentioned above, lack
of access to basic goods and services can create problems for health and well-being
such as food and fuel poverty. In certain circumstances, and the current economicrecession may be a case in point, the inability to purchase goods and services in a
conventional way may stimulate alternative means of consumption and interaction,
for example through Local Economic Trading Schemes (LETS) (Seyfang 2006),
sustainability enterprises (Davies 2009) and demand for more durable commodities
that can be repaired (Hinton and Goodman forthcoming). Here potentially positive
outcomes, from a sustainable consumption perspective, depend on the availability of
alternative mechanisms and products or the motivation of communities to establish
or demand them. On the other hand, mainstream goods which are perceived to bemore sustainable, but which retail at a premium, such as organic fruit and vegetables
or fair trade tea, coffee and chocolate, may find their niche in the market place
squeezed and replaced by budget products of questionable quality and production
methods. Any outcome is likely to be shaped by a combination of both consumption
practices and governance mechanisms.
Situated analysis of sustainable household consumption and mobility
The critical review of areas of contention within sustainable consumption provided
above has outlined some generic issues for consideration. This section argues that
consumption practices and governance mechanisms in Ireland (and elsewhere) are
often context-specific and require in-depth empirical investigation. It provides asituated sectoral analysis of how we run our homes, what we eat and how we get
around; all areas of high environmental impact in relation to household consump-
tion (OECD 2001, Michaelis and Lorek 2004, Tucker et al. 2005).
How we move around: transport and the unsustainable consumption of distance
Recent debates on the challenges of sustainability have identified carbon-intensive
transport choices and spatial mobility patterns and the unsustainable ‘consumption
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of distance’ as key areas of concern (Whitelegg 1997, Chambers 2002). The
environmental consequences of car-based transport such as GHG emissions, air
and noise pollution, habitat fragmentation and the decimation of green spaces have
been noted both in public discourse and in academic literature (Bohm et al. 2006,
Sloman 2006, EPA 2007a). Moreover, mobility-related issues such as lack of access to
basic services and employment opportunities for people without a car have been
linked to patterns of social exclusion in rural and urban areas (see Hine and Mitchell2003, Pickup and Guiliano 2005 and Donaghy et al. 2005 for international evidence).
Sustainable consumption debates have hitherto paid little attention to the
‘consumption of distance’ associated with the production and use of goods and
services. Similarly, few contributions to the sustainable consumption debate have
focused on the key role of transport in connecting members of households with sites
of consumption. This seems rather surprising given the centrality of spatial mobility
in world trade relations and its relevance to patterns of consumption in an
increasingly globalised economy. For example, the onset of the recent global
economic recession in 2008 made visible the inseparability of corporeal and virtual
mobility and economic activity, with ‘bad debts’ spreading rapidly across the globe
and international shipping of goods decreasing dramatically within a few days.
Transport and mobility issues thus deserve much greater prominence in sustainable
consumption research.
Transport policy both shapes and reflects people’s views and practices, and publicreactions to transport planning and policy measures can only be properly under-
stood if placed in their wider socio-economic, political and cultural context (Urry
2000, Gartman 2004, Wright and Curtis 2004, Rau 2008). It has been claimed that
recent shifts in EU transport policy are promoting more sustainable transport
options, and the development of a European high speed rail network is held up as an
example of this, although of course such infrastructures are not without environ-
mental impact. This contrasts with a strong focus on car-based mobility which
continues to shape national transport policies in many EU member-states, including
Ireland. This said, the publication in 2009 of Smarter Travel: A Sustainable Transport
Future - A new transport policy for Ireland 2009�2020, aimed to integrate key
sustainability goals into Irish transport policy. The measurement and evaluation of
‘smarter’ travel options, however, continues to pose considerable challenges,
including the need to integrate natural-scientific, engineering and social-scientific
research efforts and to adopt multi-method research designs that facilitate the
collection and relational analysis of qualitative and quantitative data.
Irish policy makers, planning practitioners and academic commentators havehighlighted the robust appeal of individualised mobility afforded by the car which
can act as a powerful barrier to sustainable, low-carbon transport and mobility
patterns (McDonald and Nix 2005, Comhar 2007). Recent transport policy decisions
aimed at increasing road safety such as the introduction of the National Car Test
(NCT) and stricter enforcement of road traffic laws revealed the consequences of car-
dependency for Irish society in general, and vulnerable groups such as car-less
households and the rural elderly in particular (McDonagh 2006, O’ Shea 2009). Car
dependency impacts significantly on people’s health, well-being and quality of life.
Health risks associated with increased car use include obesity due to lack of exercise,
respiratory illnesses caused by traffic-related air pollution, irregular sleep patterns
due to road and air traffic noise as well as injuries and fatalities caused by traffic
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accidents. Research carried out in Galway City has shown that the walkability of
local areas impacts significantly on people’s health and social capital (Leyden 2003).
In addition, the lack of alternatives to the car, in particular in remote rural areas, and
the comparatively marginal role of public transport, walking and cycling in the
modal mix continue to produce significant exclusionary effects. The lack of
alternatives to owning and driving a car impacts most severely on more vulnerable
social groups, including low-income households, young people, the elderly andpeople with disabilities, among others (Lohan and Wickham 1999, Wickham 2006,
Rau and Hennessy 2009).
These health and social risks are often seen as acceptable trade-offs for the
benefits of automobility, with the possible exception of road deaths. However, it is
important to note that the shared risks of various carbon-dependent mobility
options often fail to register with the public and that this influences the introduction
and implementation of sustainable transport policies. Recent negative reactions by
members of the public to proposals to restrict traffic in Dublin City Centre and to
introduce a car parking space levy illustrate this. Moreover, it is possible to observe a
strong ‘value-action-gap’ regarding people’s transport choices and mobility habits.
While many people in Ireland acknowledge the need for more sustainable transport
and a reduction in the ‘consumption of distance’, few are willing to avoid trips or
switch to alternatives to the car. This is partly due to structural inadequacies, in
particular in relation to public transport but also concerning the provision of
facilities for pedestrians and cyclists. However, we can also observe considerablediscrepancies between what people describe as appropriate mobility behaviour and
what they actually do that cannot be solely explained by a lack of alternatives. This
matches research findings from other areas of consumption.
Given the centrality of transport and mobility in promoting sustainable
consumption, there is an urgent need for reliable data on people’s mobility habits
in Ireland, their culture-specific views of different modes of transport and the
effectiveness of policy measures and practical solutions aimed at reducing car
dependency. The measurement of mobility trends and modal split patterns and the
evaluation of sustainable transport initiatives to reduce the consumption of distance
in Ireland remains an important task. While large-scale transport and mobility
indicators such as miles travelled per annum, fuel consumption and money raised
through road tolling can yield insights into broader trends, it is also essential to
complement them with qualitative data on people’s transport decisions and mobility
choices. A strong argument can be made for the adoption of case study designs that
focus on the social, cultural, material and political conditions of spatial mobility in a
particular local area and that monitor the effectiveness of policy interventions usingdocumentary and observational data. These can be complemented with expert
interviews with policy makers to identify possible tensions between policy and
practice. Event-centred and narrative interviews and focus groups can help elicit
information about mobility decisions of individuals, families and groups.
According to Vigar (2002, p. 15), ‘[t]ransport planning that meets the ecological
and social demands [of our time] requires changes in user behaviour, rather than
government merely responding to established user behaviour patterns.’ Proposals for
reducing Ireland’s car dependency include information campaigns and fiscal options.
Recent road safety campaigns on Irish television, the promotion of mobility
management plans for large organisations and the introduction in 2008 of a motor
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taxation system that takes into account CO2 emissions levels represent such policy
initiatives. Recent developments of a bike-sharing scheme in Dublin do, however,
illustrate the possibility for innovative solutions to mobility being developed (see
http://www.dublinbikes.ie).More recently, virtual mobility options have been discussed as a low-carbon
alternative to corporeal mobility involving cars and planes. The term ‘virtual
mobility’ describes the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) to
replace actual physical mobility. However, virtual mobility options such as telework,
e-governance and e-business and technology to facilitate more sustainable corporeal
travel (e.g. car-pooling websites and real-time travel information for public transport
via mobile phone) present many challenges, some of which relate to resilience of
established consumption practices. To date the social, cultural and environmentalimpacts of virtual mobility remain poorly understood. In summary the collection of
qualitative evidence is an essential requirement in addressing existing gaps in
knowledge regarding a) the role and significance of different modes of transport in
Irish society, b) people’ views of alternative technologies and infrastructures such as
virtual mobility tools for e-commerce and teleworking and c) reactions by members
of the public to different economic (dis)incentives (e.g. road and parking taxes, bike
schemes).
How we live: heating, cooling, washing, cleaning and eating
According to the OECD (2001), housing accounts for around 25% of total
consumption expenditure in Europe. Energy and water consumption are increasing
due to larger homes being built for fewer people who are using more electrical
appliances. Within the household, space heating (and cooling) is the largest end use
of energy, followed by water heating (Shove 2003). Domestic water consumption has
risen dramatically in many developed countries over the past century, with bathing,showering and washing clothes accounting for around a third of domestic water
consumption across Europe (EEA 2001). Environmental impacts within the house-
hold are exacerbated as the frequency of appliance replacement increases due to
lower durability, declining costs of replacement (vis-a-vis costly and time-consuming
repairs) and rapid fashion changes. While there have been some gains made in terms
of appliance efficiency, this has been cancelled out by the increasing numbers of
appliances being used (Faiers et al. 2007). According to Shove (2003), these patterns
of household consumption can be linked to the transformation of everyday habitsand commonplace understandings of comfort, cleanliness and convenience.
In Ireland the residential sector’s Total Primary Energy Requirement (TPER)
increased by 31% (2% per annum on average) between 1990 and 2004 and accounts
for 25% of Ireland’s Total Final Consumption (TFC) (SEI 2005, p. 2). The residential
sector’s energy-related CO2 emissions represented 27% of the total attributable to
energy in Ireland in 2004, making it the second largest sector after transport (32%).
In 1999/2000 those in the lowest income decile spent on average 10% of their
disposable income on energy while the highest earners spent 2%, raising concernsabout fuel poverty (Healey 2004). Ireland has had a higher average energy
consumption per dwelling than most other EU countries, with electricity use 19%
above and CO2 emissions (climate corrected) 97% above the EU-15 average (SEI
2005, p. 3). Irish homes use around a quarter of all energy used nationally, which is
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even more than industry, and the average home consumes almost 40% more
electricity than it did in 1990. These figures are partially attributable to the increase
in dwelling size since the mid-1990s and the property boom, at least until the
economic downturn in 2008. While some improvements have been made in recent
times regarding insulating newer homes, these statistics illustrate the enormous
challenges for reducing energy consumption in the home.Similar challenges lie ahead for the arena of domestic water consumption, with
increasing numbers of households using more water consuming technologies more
frequently. Over time comfort requirements have markedly changed. According to
some estimates, only 5% of water consumption is for drinking with the remainder
being relatively equally split between washing and cleaning, showering and bathing,
and using the WC. Estimates for daily water consumption in Ireland vary because of
a paucity of information on levels of water consumption due to low levels of water
metering and the removal of water charges for domestic usage in 1997. The OECD
(2000) have recommended the reintroduction of domestic water charges and the
installation of water meters in new dwellings as key mechanisms for reducing
household water consumption. Similarly, the EU Water Framework Directive, which
will be transposed into Irish law at some point in the future, aims to protect available
water resources and encourage sustainable water use. Although much of the activity
on the Directive in Ireland has to date focused on water quality issues, it is likely that
consideration of more sustainable household water consumption will come to play a
bigger role during implementation (see Lam 1999, Syme et al. 2000, Gilig and Barr2006).
The OECD (2001) estimates that food consumption constitutes one third of
household’s consumption impact (and between 10�35% of household consumption
expenditure) mainly relating to production processes such as emissions from
livestock, over-fishing, food miles and packaging waste (see also Tukker et al.
2005). The Sustainable Europe Research Institute (SERI) defines sustainable food
consumption as a preference for: food with high resource efficiency (e.g. open-ground
cultivation); regional instead of imported food; organically instead of conventionally
produced food; lower amounts of bottled beverages; and meatless or reduced meat
diets based on the specific emissions in CO2 equivalents per food category as a proxy
for the environmental effects of different vegetable and meat categories (Friedl et al.
2006). However, there is still considerable controversy over what makes the food
sector more sustainable both in terms of production methods (e.g. the contrasting
costs and benefits of conventional, organic or genetically modified agriculture) and
consumption practices (e.g. buying local or imported food, purchasing from farmers
markets or supermarkets, buying standard or fair-trade products). Despite this,concerns about rising food-related emissions and the existence of food poverty
despite (and in some cases as a result of) increasing calorie intake in Europe persist
(Carlsson-Kanyama 1998, Kramer et al. 1998, Faist et al. 2001, OECD 2001, Shaw
2006). In Ireland food consumption has attracted considerable attention of late, with
Molcho et al. (2007) and Friel et al. (2006) examining issues of food poverty and Sage
(2003) and Tovey (2002, 2006) examining the emergence of alternative food networks
(primarily in rural locations). The North/South Ireland Food Consumption Survey
focused on people’s awareness of issues relating to diet and nutrition (Flynn 2001,
Strain 2001). In contrast, interactions between regulation, production and household
food consumption remain under-researched.
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Despite some technological improvements in product design in relation to some
household appliances and greater awareness among householders (at least in the area
of energy consumption), environmental impacts of consumption in the home
continue to grow. Alternative approaches to examining the related arenas of
production and consumption, as well as identifying appropriate governing mechan-
isms are required. Calls to conserve energy and water emanating from policy circles,
for example, often do not connect with the needs, experiences and day-to-day
practices of householders. As Shove (2003) has identified people tend to focus on
meeting needs and desires such as keeping warm (or cool), keeping themselves and
their belongings clean and generally making their lives more manageable. Further
research examining the production-consumption-regulation interface of household
consumption activities is overdue. This research will need to focus on the many
stakeholders that make up complex consumption chains today, from producers and
regulators to the householders themselves.
Conclusion: an agenda for Ireland
Sustainable development, and the integrally related matter of sustainable consump-
tion, has been on the policy agenda for more than 20 years (WCED 1987), yet its
meaning and implications are still far from agreed. The evocation of ‘sustainable’
in the consumption context certainly remains a site of negotiation in governance
arrangements between different actors and interests. Despite this, much work has
been conducted on the supply side of the production of goods: sustainable
technologies for energy generation, materials mining and processing, and product
manufacture have been developed, innovated and diffused in the last decade.
However, consumption continues to rise and consumers have been a notoriously
difficult target for policy makers seeking to induce more sustainable practices, not
least as a result of the political difficulties inherent in constraining how people
should live. This paper has suggested that there are four key reasons for this: a lack of
appropriate data, weak understanding of behavioural dynamics, crude governing
technologies, a lack of integration between production, consumption and regulatory
stakeholders.While these issues have a global resonance they are particularly stark within an
Irish (both Northern Ireland and the Republic) context and, despite the recent
economic downturn which has affected some components of conspicuous consump-
tion, further research within this geographical context is urgently required. Certainly
in terms of setting an agenda of priority issues and practices the following issues
should be addressed. First, and most fundamentally, detailed, comprehensive and
coherent baseline information about the form of basic consumption patterns is
essential. Currently relevant data, if it is collected at all, is fragmentary. For example,
the 2008 UNEP Global Survey on Sustainable Lifestyles was a voluntary online
survey and hence a self-selecting population. The Greendex 2009 Consumer Choice
and the Environment survey claimed to be a worldwide tracking survey and was
conducted in January 2008 and repeated in January 2009 in order to establish any
changes in behaviour as a result of the economic crisis, but was based on 14 countries
only, and did not include Ireland.
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Following on from this consolidation of information collection, more consistent
and comparable mechanisms for continued monitoring of consumption patterns
need to be developed and resourced. Second, an improved understanding of why
people act the way that they do in the particular, and changing, socio-economic and
environmental circumstances within the island of Ireland is also essential. Gathering
such information will require in-depth analysis of particular consumption practices
as they are enacted by different people with diverse lifestyles and living contexts.
Priority areas for Ireland, as identified by the recent OECD Report on Ireland’s
environmental performance (OECD 2009), include water, energy and transport. In
the area of transport, for example, this might involve investigating the role and
significance of different modes of transport in Irish Society. Certainly people’s views
of alternative technologies and infrastructures such as virtual mobility tools for
e-commerce and teleworking would be useful, as would a greater understanding of
reactions by members of the public to different economic instruments (such as road
and parking taxes or bicycle schemes).
Third, while it is increasingly recognised that behaviour has many drivers that
may ebb and flow over time, current policy mechanisms intended to shape behaviour
employed across Ireland have tended to be rigid in application (e.g. waste charging
mechanisms) and insensitive to difference (e.g. general mass media awareness
campaigns). There needs to be more reflection on the impacts of these policy tools
on sustainable consumption and more attention to wider governance processes that
affect how these policies are generated, shaped and implemented. For example, what
alternative tools could be developed and how might they resonate with the people
that are being targeted? Multi-stakeholder practice-oriented scenario building may
be one such approach. Drawing on European-led design-focused research (Quist
et al. 2001) there are possibilities for bringing together actors with various roles in the
consumption process, including supply side actors (from manufacturing, business
and retail) as well as the demand side stakeholders (including consumers and
consumer organisations) with regulators, environmental non-governmental organi-
sations and other relevant contributors (such as researchers, sustainability entrepre-
neurs, designers and communication consultants) to discuss, develop and evaluate
innovative alternative scenarios for practice-oriented household consumption such
as heating, cooling, washing, lighting and eating.
Fourth, and finally, there is space for work in Ireland that adopts a more holistic,
but still grounded, approach to sustainable consumption; work that integrates rather
than isolates all those involved in production processes, consumption practices and
regulation formation and implementation. In essence this suggestion implies a
particular form of governance, rather than governmental, activity for the realm of
sustainable consumption where actors from a range of governing spheres (public,
private and civil society) as well as across tiers of governing activity (supra-national,
national and local) engage in defining and resolving consumption issues. Of course
such multi-stakeholder interaction will not necessarily develop agreed or compre-
hensive solutions at the outset. Sustainable consumption will remain a highly
political issue. However, allowing diverse groups of social actors to come together as
part of the research process and directly confront sustainability challenges may
stimulate creative visions about desired future scenarios that move beyond the
territories of discipline, business scope or backyard.
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Acknowledgements
This paper is based on research conducted as part of CONSENSUS: a cross border householdanalysis of consumption, environment and sustainability (http://www.consensus.ie), funded bythe EPA STRIVE Programme 2007�2013 Science, Technology, Research & Innovation for theEnvironment (STRIVE) � An Environmental Protection Agency Programme 2007�2013. Theauthors would like to thank the EPA and the Advisory Board of CONSENSUS: a crossborder household analysis of consumption, environment and sustainability for their support.
Notes
1. This has also been addressed as the so-called ‘value-action gap’, whereby a considerablegap can often be observed between people’s attitudes, which are often pro-environmental,and their everyday behaviours (Doran 2007, p. 33).
2. There are a large number of diverse definitions of quality of life. For example, Cutter (1985)defines it as ‘an individual’s happiness or satisfaction with life and environment includingneeds and desires and other tangible and intangible factors which determine overall well-being’. For Kline (2001) quality of life, at a minimum, needs to measure the ability ofcitizens to get adequate health care, housing, child care, public safety and education.
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