Understanding Energy Behaviour – A Necessity for Supporting Domestic Energy Conservation through Design
Licentiate thesis, 2014

Domestic energy consumption is continuing to increase and the need to decrease consumption is growing more evident. In this research, two studies were conducted to further the understanding of domestic energy behaviour and increase the knowledge of how energy conservation can be supported. The first study was carried out as an interview study to explore both factors that influence people’s energy behaviour and strategies people currently have adopted for reducing consumption. The second study was a field trial that assessed the extent to which an energy feedback system could support households in reducing their consumption. The findings show that many different factors, i.e., factors related to the person, the activity, and the society, influence people’s domestic energy behaviour as well as their engagement in reducing their energy consumption. As these factors collectively set the preconditions for people’s energy behaviour, it is vital to take into account the interconnection of the different factors when aiming to support energy conservation. For systems and products to be successful in supporting energy conservation, they need to match the preconditions in a way that enables people to reduce consumption while still satisfying their everyday needs and goals. As this research have indicated, energy feedback systems can support motivated people who have the ability and possibility to reduce consumption, but will be a less successful support system for people whose consumption is governed by preconditions that they cannot, or will not, change. A holistic understanding of people’s preconditions and their energy related activities is thus required in order to develop successful products, services, and systems that enable, facilitate, or encourage more people to reduce their domestic energy consumption.

Energy conservation

energy behaviour

domestic energy consumption

design for sustainable behaviour

energy feedback

VG
Opponent: Assistant Professor Maria Håkansson, Department of Applied IT, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden

Author

Anneli Selvefors

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Design and Human Factors

Use and Adoption of Interactive Energy Feedback Systems

Proceedings from the IASDR Conference 2013, Consilience and Innovation in Design, 24-30 August 2013, Tokyo,;(2013)p. 1771-1782

Paper in proceeding

What’s in it for the user? Effects and perceived user benefits of online interactive energy feedback.

Proceedings of the ERSCP-EMSU 2013 conference, 16th Conference of the European Roundtable on Sustainable Consumption and Production (ERSCP) & 7th Conference of the Environmental Management for Sustainable Universities (EMSU), 4 – 7 June 2013, Istanbul, Turkey.,;(2013)p. 1-14

Paper in proceeding

Social Energy

VINNOVA (2010-02679), 2011-01-01 -- 2013-12-31.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)

Design

Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified

Areas of Advance

Energy

Publisher

Chalmers

VG

Opponent: Assistant Professor Maria Håkansson, Department of Applied IT, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden

More information

Latest update

5/22/2020