Americans Willing To Pay For More For Gas If Emissions Offset

California Talks A Big Game With ESG Investing. Are You Betting on Renewable Energy to save your portfolio and the environment?
Source: ENB

ENB Publishers Note: Purely my opinion, but I don’t buy this for a SECOND. All I needed to know is who ran the poll…as always, I will let the readers decide… 

Despite high inflation, 66 percent of Americans and 80 percent of young Americans are willing to pay more for sustainable products versus less sustainable competitors, according to the second Business of Sustainability Index by GreenPrint, a PDI company.

However, 78 percent of Americans say they don’t know how to identify environmentally friendly companies, despite wanting to buy from them. To confirm a company’s environmental friendliness, 50 percent agree that clear language on products is important, and 46 percent say third-party or independent source confirmation is important.

Among those that shop for environmentally friendly products, 72 percent use labels or third-party certifications on the product’s packaging to confirm if it’s environmentally friendly.

“Americans are very clear—they want sustainable solutions and are willing to pay more for them, if only they knew how to find them,” said Pete Davis, CEO and Co-Founder of GreenPrint. “We are amid a significant acceleration in public demand for sustainability, and companies that do not meet that demand will quickly fall behind their competitors, especially with young Americans.”

The study also revealed a significant trust gap between Americans and corporations when it comes to sustainability. Only 38 percent of Americans believe corporations most or all of the time when they make claims of environmental friendliness, a noticeable drop from 47 percent in GreenPrint’s 2021 study.

Overall, 41 percent say American corporations are doing a poor job at reducing their carbon footprint. When it comes to demonstrating an actionable commitment to becoming more environmentally friendly, 56 percent of Americans say airlines and fleet services are not doing well, followed by the energy and gas industry.

“Over the past year, public trust in the authenticity and effectiveness of companies’ sustainability efforts has eroded significantly,” Davis added. “This puts businesses making genuine progress in a bind because their actions are less likely to be recognized. To win back trust, the data clearly shows Americans want companies to validate their sustainability claims through independent sources, both on the corporate level and for their products.”

Other key findings from GreenPrint’s second Business of Sustainability Index include that 75 percent of Americans are concerned about the environmental impact of the products they buy.

Also, 64 percent of Americans would be willing to pay more for gas if the carbon emissions from their purchases were offset through sustainability efforts, for Americans ages 18-34 this jumps to 75 percent. When the survey was conducted the national gas price average was $4.17.

A product’s environmental friendliness is important to the purchasing decision for 69 percent of people while 70 percent agree that climate events from the past year – wildfires, floods, air quality dangers, extreme heat, drought – have made them more likely to purchase environmentally friendly products. Of this group, 38 percent were not buying those types of products before, but recent climate events have encouraged them to do so.

Furthermore, 45 percent believe it’s hard to maintain environmentally friendly purchasing habits, 73 percent would sign up for a company’s voluntary rewards or loyalty program if it helped reduce the carbon footprint of their purchases, 64 percent would like to own a credit card that automatically offsets a percentage of the environmental impact of their purchases, and 60 percent are more likely to buy stock in an environmentally friendly company versus one that is not.

This index and its future editions will continue to track sentiment around sustainability in the economy—how climate consciousness impacts consumer preference and perceptions of companies and their products, as well as the overall effectiveness of the sustainability benchmarking ecosystem across various sectors and demographics.

Source: rigzone.com

About Michael Tanner 12 Articles
Michael Tanner help co-founded Energy News Beat to deliver the best energy news content.  When not on ENB - he works in the oil and gas business for a private oil & gas operator based in Dallas, Texas. Michael graduated from Colorado School of Mines with a B.S. in Economics and Petroleum Engineering and a M.S. in Mineral and Energy Economics from Colorado School of Mines.