4.4 Review

Energy efficiency behaviour in the built environment-an assessment of current evaluation practices in the Nordic countries

Journal

ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12053-021-09938-z

Keywords

Energy efficiency; Built environment; Evaluation; User behaviour; Environmental psychology

Funding

  1. Lund University - Swedish Energy Agency [P39938]

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The study focuses on energy efficiency in the built environment in the Nordic countries and evaluates the current practices in behavioral evaluation, finding that researchers use a variety of disciplinary approaches but lack a psychological understanding of individual behavior and behavioral change. It suggests that the application of environmental psychology could enhance a cross-disciplinary evaluation approach and improve the understanding of the transformational process.
Behavioural change is expected to play a significant role in the transformation to a more energy efficient built environment. Despite this, current evaluation practice of interventions often overlook behavioural aspects in their ambition of advancing our knowledge on transformative change. Moreover, little attention is paid to how different research perspectives on human behaviour can complement each other in providing a broader scope and deeper understanding of behavioural change. In this study, we acknowledge this gap, and assess the current evaluation practices on behaviour. The focus is on energy efficiency in the built environment in the Nordic countries, and evaluations undertaken by researchers. The assessment shows that the Nordic evaluations apply a variety of disciplinary approaches, but have only to a limited extent addressed a psychological understanding of individual behaviour and behavioural change. We analyse and discuss the potential contribution of environmental psychology in strengthening a cross disciplinary evaluation approach. In all, the results indicate the value of also adding environmental psychology, to provide a stronger cross disciplinary understanding of behavioural change, and the need to coordinate and combine evaluations departing from different disciplinary approaches, to improve understanding of the transformational process.

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