Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives

It is estimated that 2.5–10 bn disposable coffee cups are used every year in the U.K. Most of these cups end up in landfill or as litter, as the majority of poly-coated paper cups are not recyclable or not recycled. Here, we report on a field experiment that was conducted at twelve university and bu...

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Main Authors: Wouter Poortinga, Louise Whitaker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/3/873
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spelling doaj-43fdbc3d0313487dab0f9843b376d5502020-11-24T20:41:21ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-03-0110387310.3390/su10030873su10030873Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial IncentivesWouter Poortinga0Louise Whitaker1Welsh School of Architecture, Cardiff University, Bute Building, King Edward VII Avenue, Cardiff CF10 3NB, UKBewley’s Tea and Coffee UK Ltd., 8 Century Point, Cressex Business Park, Halifax Road, High Wycombe HP12 3SL, UKIt is estimated that 2.5–10 bn disposable coffee cups are used every year in the U.K. Most of these cups end up in landfill or as litter, as the majority of poly-coated paper cups are not recyclable or not recycled. Here, we report on a field experiment that was conducted at twelve university and business sites to examine whether the use of reusable cups can be promoted through easily implementable measures. The study found that both environmental messaging and the provision of alternatives increased the use of reusable cups. While a charge on disposable cups increased their use as well, a discount on reusable cups did not. The effects for the individual measures were modest, but additive, meaning that the greatest behavioural change was achieved with a combination of measures. None of the measures negatively impacted the total number of hot drink sales. One university continued with the charge after the experiment had finished and distributed more reusable cups for free among their students. This boosted the use of reusable cups up to 33.7% across three cafés. This shows that a charge in combination with the provision of alternatives can increase the use of reusable cups substantially in the long term.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/3/873coffee cupsfield experimentlatte levyenvironmental messagingprovision of alternativesfinancial incentiveschargediscountsustainable behaviour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wouter Poortinga
Louise Whitaker
spellingShingle Wouter Poortinga
Louise Whitaker
Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives
Sustainability
coffee cups
field experiment
latte levy
environmental messaging
provision of alternatives
financial incentives
charge
discount
sustainable behaviour
author_facet Wouter Poortinga
Louise Whitaker
author_sort Wouter Poortinga
title Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives
title_short Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives
title_full Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives
title_fullStr Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives
title_full_unstemmed Promoting the Use of Reusable Coffee Cups through Environmental Messaging, the Provision of Alternatives and Financial Incentives
title_sort promoting the use of reusable coffee cups through environmental messaging, the provision of alternatives and financial incentives
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-03-01
description It is estimated that 2.5–10 bn disposable coffee cups are used every year in the U.K. Most of these cups end up in landfill or as litter, as the majority of poly-coated paper cups are not recyclable or not recycled. Here, we report on a field experiment that was conducted at twelve university and business sites to examine whether the use of reusable cups can be promoted through easily implementable measures. The study found that both environmental messaging and the provision of alternatives increased the use of reusable cups. While a charge on disposable cups increased their use as well, a discount on reusable cups did not. The effects for the individual measures were modest, but additive, meaning that the greatest behavioural change was achieved with a combination of measures. None of the measures negatively impacted the total number of hot drink sales. One university continued with the charge after the experiment had finished and distributed more reusable cups for free among their students. This boosted the use of reusable cups up to 33.7% across three cafés. This shows that a charge in combination with the provision of alternatives can increase the use of reusable cups substantially in the long term.
topic coffee cups
field experiment
latte levy
environmental messaging
provision of alternatives
financial incentives
charge
discount
sustainable behaviour
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/3/873
work_keys_str_mv AT wouterpoortinga promotingtheuseofreusablecoffeecupsthroughenvironmentalmessagingtheprovisionofalternativesandfinancialincentives
AT louisewhitaker promotingtheuseofreusablecoffeecupsthroughenvironmentalmessagingtheprovisionofalternativesandfinancialincentives
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