Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires

Cases of haze in Singapore have been a yearly occurrence for more than a decade and are rued by the local population. The haze is a product of the forest fires across Borneo and Sumatra in Indonesia where the slash and burn techniques are used by small farmers and multinational corporations alike to...

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Main Author: Zenata, Putera
Other Authors: Michael David Gumert
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52641
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-526412019-12-10T14:36:37Z Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires Zenata, Putera Michael David Gumert School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism Cases of haze in Singapore have been a yearly occurrence for more than a decade and are rued by the local population. The haze is a product of the forest fires across Borneo and Sumatra in Indonesia where the slash and burn techniques are used by small farmers and multinational corporations alike to clear lands for plantations, most commonly palm oil. Regulating people’s consumption behaviour is arguably the most sustainable way to prevent forest fires, and hence avoiding future cases of haze. However, despite having the highest per capita consumption of palm oil in the region, the Singapore population has directed much of the blame for haze towards the ineptitude of the Indonesian government in overcoming the forest fires. The study seeks to find out if the people in Singapore understand how consumption of palm oil indirectly causes the haze and examines the extent of people’s willingness to change their palm oil consumption behaviour. Factors such as environmental values, attitudes and giving a verbal pledge are found to significantly affect participant’s propensity to change their consumption behaviour. On the other hand, the reported degree of disruption the haze cases have inflicted on the participants’ daily life turns out to be mostly irrelevant in predicting their consumption behaviour change. The priming experiment conducted on real time shoppers finds that cue-cards advocating haze free Singapore is less successful in reducing their palm oil product purchases in the super market when compared to cue cards advocating orang-utan preservation. Bachelor of Arts 2013-05-21T07:28:12Z 2013-05-21T07:28:12Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52641 en Nanyang Technological University 62 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Behaviorism
Zenata, Putera
Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires
description Cases of haze in Singapore have been a yearly occurrence for more than a decade and are rued by the local population. The haze is a product of the forest fires across Borneo and Sumatra in Indonesia where the slash and burn techniques are used by small farmers and multinational corporations alike to clear lands for plantations, most commonly palm oil. Regulating people’s consumption behaviour is arguably the most sustainable way to prevent forest fires, and hence avoiding future cases of haze. However, despite having the highest per capita consumption of palm oil in the region, the Singapore population has directed much of the blame for haze towards the ineptitude of the Indonesian government in overcoming the forest fires. The study seeks to find out if the people in Singapore understand how consumption of palm oil indirectly causes the haze and examines the extent of people’s willingness to change their palm oil consumption behaviour. Factors such as environmental values, attitudes and giving a verbal pledge are found to significantly affect participant’s propensity to change their consumption behaviour. On the other hand, the reported degree of disruption the haze cases have inflicted on the participants’ daily life turns out to be mostly irrelevant in predicting their consumption behaviour change. The priming experiment conducted on real time shoppers finds that cue-cards advocating haze free Singapore is less successful in reducing their palm oil product purchases in the super market when compared to cue cards advocating orang-utan preservation.
author2 Michael David Gumert
author_facet Michael David Gumert
Zenata, Putera
format Final Year Project
author Zenata, Putera
author_sort Zenata, Putera
title Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires
title_short Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires
title_full Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires
title_fullStr Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires
title_full_unstemmed Understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in Singapore and the Indonesian forest fires
title_sort understanding pro-environmental consumption behaviour change : the case of haze in singapore and the indonesian forest fires
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52641
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