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Households' perceptions on sustainable home behaviour and improvements in Australia

conference contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by Jing Yang, P Zou
The consumption of energy in the residential building is a major contributor to Australia's stationary energy greenhouse gas emissions. With the aim of investigating the householders' motivations and perspectives on sustainable home improvements, this study, by using an online survey instrument, collected more than 500 sets of questionnaire data from households in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Through statistical analysis of the data collected, this research has found that construction cost and government incentive were considered as major influence factors on achieving energy efficient residential building development, and the lower bills from reduced energy and water consumption were considered as the most important benefits from the households' perspectives. The research also found that although many households exhibited a high level of awareness or had implemented some sustainability improvements, the total number of potential improvements scored poorly. A suggestion, based on these research findings, is that the government should promote the reasons and benefits for sustainability home improvements that are identified in this research paper, and try to reduce material costs and improve government incentives.

History

Event

Sustainable Building and Construction. Conference (2013 : Coventry, England)

Pagination

166 - 175

Publisher

Coventry University

Location

Coventry, England

Place of publication

Coventry, England

Start date

2013-07-03

End date

2013-07-05

ISBN-13

9781846000492

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

R Soetanto, N Tsang, A Ahmed

Title of proceedings

SB 2013 : Proceedings of the Sustainable Building and Construction Conference

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