Logo image
Saving from home! How income, efficiency, and curtailment behaviors shape energy consumption dynamics in US households?
Abstract   Peer reviewed

Saving from home! How income, efficiency, and curtailment behaviors shape energy consumption dynamics in US households?

Pranay Kumar, Holly Caggiano, Rachael Shwom, Frank A. Felder and Clinton J. Andrews
Energy (Oxford), Vol.271
05/15/2023

Abstract

Behavior Curtailment Efficiency Electricity Energy Residential energy consumption
The objective of this study is to analyze the role of energy efficiency and curtailment behaviors and examine how these behaviors are mediated by annual household income to explain overall energy consumption dynamics in US households using a nationally representative dataset. Our two-part empirical analysis first explores the role of annual household income on the efficiency and curtailment behaviors while controlling for the physical and demographic variables using structural equation modeling (SEM). Next, we test the extent and direction of self-reported energy efficiency and curtailment behaviors in explaining total energy/electricity consumption of households using cluster analysis and multivariate linear regression methods. We find efficiency behaviors to be positively correlated with the household income. However, the direction of relationship between income and curtailment behaviors appears to vary depending upon specific actions. Our findings also suggest that in comparison to the consistent role of physical factors in the residential energy consumption, the nature and direction of behavioral factors are mixed and vary with specific behaviors and context. Our study builds upon the existing literature on residential energy saving behaviors and provides important insights for tailored, targeted, and effective policies. •Study role of income, efficiency, and curtailment behaviors in energy consumption. •Separately examine residential energy and electricity consumption in the US. •Explore role of annual household income on the efficiency and curtailment behaviors. •We find consistent role of physical factors in explaining residential energy consumption. •However, nature and direction of behavioral factors vary with context.
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2023.126988View
Version of Record (VoR) Energy
url
Report an accessibility issueView
Please complete a content remediation request to report an accessibility issue with a library electronic resource, website, or service.

Metrics

Details

Logo image