Consumers in USA rank last in adopting behaviors to create sustainable living
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- MeganMcKenzie
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You've read the news—everyone wants to be green now. But do you really know how your personal choices are adding up? What about the choices of your fellow citizens? How well are people around the globe adopting behaviors that can make the world a more environmentally sustainable place?
National Geographic and the international polling firm GlobeScan have just conducted a study measuring and monitoring consumer progress toward environmentally sustainable consumption in 14 countries around the world.
Why? We wanted to give people a better idea of how consumers in different countries are doing in taking action to preserve our planet by tracking, reporting, and promoting environmentally sustainable consumption and citizen behavior.
This quantitative consumer study of 14,000 consumers in a total of 14 countries asked about such behavior as energy use and conservation, transportation choices, food sources, the relative use of green products versus traditional products, attitudes towards the environment and sustainability, and knowledge of environmental issues. A group of international experts helped us determine the behaviors that were most critical to investigate.
The result: the National Geographic/GlobeScan "Consumer Greendex," a scientifically derived sustainable consumption index of actual consumer behavior and material lifestyles across 14 countries. The Greendex will be tracked over time and will be comparable across the selection of countries representing both the developed and developing world.
To provide context for the Greendex results, we developed a "Market Basket," an index of actual consumption in four areas important to environmentally sustainable behavior—energy, transportation, travel, and consumer goods. A Market Basket for each country was assembled using a set of independently collected macroeconomic indicators, gathered by the Economist Intelligence Unit, which mirror, in part, the consumer behavior measured by the Greendex survey. The purpose of the Market Basket is to provide an external estimate of the results of changes in consumer behavior over time. The Greendex, for example, measures things consumers are doing to save energy in a country; the Market Basket measures whether total energy consumption in the country is actually going up or down. The Market Basket will also establish a framework for comparing the relative environmental impact of each country's size and rate of growth, over time.
Next steps on this website:
1. Check out the Greendex survey results.
2. Calculate your personal Greendex score.
3. Measure your knowledge of some basic issues against what your fellow citizens know, at home and around the world.
4. Learn how to take steps to change your behavior so
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Elligirl
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I was reading through Brazil's summary and apparently they get a better score because only 9% have heating in their homes. That's not really a personal choice, is it? If only 9% of Canadians had house heating, we'd be frozen to our igloo walls!
- 3 years ago
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Elligirl
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egarlow
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Horribly faulty research. I'm sorry, but I'd rather be guilty of greenhouse gasses than live in China or Brazil. Ugh.
- 3 years ago
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egarlow
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regjoeschmo
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Our nation is raised to be consumers from the day they are born. Why grow a garden if you can just buy veggies at the grocery store? Why hunt if you can buy meat at the grocery store? Why learn how to make clothes if you can buy it at the department store? The list goes on and on. We are slves to our dollar and with the collapse of our money we will have major hystaria amongst the people who fail to see beyond the scope of consumerism.
- 3 years ago
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regjoeschmo
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MeganMcKenzie
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It has to do with how large our houses are, how many cars on the road etc. I bet you don't see them driving motorhomes, giant suv's, speedboats, race cars, the list is endless. It has to do with how USA has squandered our resources in ways that do not sustain our environment or the worlds.
- 3 years ago
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MeganMcKenzie
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dgold0101
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Huh, there's something a little fishy about this...China's rated pretty high, yet you can't even breathe the air in most of their cities. And 1,000 consumers per country? Not the best of studies....
- 3 years ago
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dgold0101
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Stevox
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dgold0101:
I guess it is easier to sustain a society when you abuse people's human rights and destroy people's lives for the sake of the masses.
- 3 years ago
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Stevox
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MeganMcKenzie
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So how do we wake folks up?
- 3 years ago
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MeganMcKenzie
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huntre
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The good ol' USA.
We don't know. We don't want to know. - 3 years ago
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huntre
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ihateyou
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we are going down the toilet fast, are education level is dropping not to mention we are now like 45th in life expectancy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_life_expectancy
- 3 years ago
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ihateyou
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StrategoShogun
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Individual Independence. Perhaps it does have a price.
- 3 years ago
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StrategoShogun
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teto007
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im not proud to be an american at all right now
- 3 years ago
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teto007
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waveon
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....oh the future can wait. we have a war to win. we need to pull it together.
- 3 years ago
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waveon
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EdieJane
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WE can do better than this.
- 3 years ago
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EdieJane