Sucheta Dalal :US Consumers Rank Last In World Survey of Green Habits
Sucheta Dalal

Click here for FREE MEMBERSHIP to Moneylife Foundation which entitles you to:
• Access to information on investment issues

• Invitations to attend free workshops on financial literacy
• Grievance redressal

 

MoneyLife
You are here: Home » What's New » US Consumers Rank Last In World Survey of Green Habits
                       Previous           Next

US Consumers Rank Last In World Survey of Green Habits  

May 9, 2008

by Queenie Wong

 

WASHINGTON - Americans rank last in a new National Geographic-sponsored survey released Wednesday that compares environmental consumption habits in 14 countries.

 

Americans were least likely to choose the greener option in three out of four categories - housing, transportation and consumer goods_ according to the assessment. In the fourth category, food, Americans ranked ahead of Japanese consumers, who eat more meat and seafood.

 

The rankings, called “Greendex,” are the first to compare the lifestyles and behaviors of consumers in multiple countries, according to the National Geographic Society.

 

It plans to conduct the 100-plus question survey annually and considers trends more important than yearly scores, said Terry Garcia, executive vice president of National Geographic’s mission programs.

 

“This is not just a one-time snapshot,” Garcia said. “Some of the most important information may yet be revealed.”

 

India and Brazil tied for the highest score - 60 points out of a hundred. U.S. consumers scored 44.9.

 

In between, China scored 56.1, Mexico 54.2, Hungary 53.2, Russia 52.4, Great Britain 50.2, Germany 50.2, Australia 50.2, Spain 50, Japan 49.1, France 48.7 and Canada 48.5.

 

Results are based on 1,000 online respondents per country interviewed in January and February by GlobeScan, an international polling firm based in Toronto.

 

To see how you score, take an abbreviated version of the survey. It’s at nationalgeographic.com/greendex

 

A separate GlobeScan survey showed consumers in Brazil, Mexico and China to be most concerned about global warming. In general, people in developing countries were more worried about harming the environment than those in developed ones were. They also live in smaller houses, are more likely to consume locally produced food and more likely to get to work by foot, bike or public transportation.

 

The consumer choice rankings were adjusted for factors in which individuals have no control, such as climate and the availability of mass transit.

 

Originally published on Thursday, May 8, 2008 by McClatchy Newspapers

 


-- Sucheta Dalal