4.7 Article

?Choosing not to choose?: Preferences for various uses of recycled water

Journal

ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.106992

Keywords

Recycled Water; Consumer Preferences; Experiments; Water Conservation

Funding

  1. USDA-NIFA CONSERVE project [20166800725064]
  2. USDA Economic Research Service through the Center for Behavioral and Experimental Agri-Environmental Research (CBEAR) [59-6000-4-0064]

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A study based on field research and survey found that people in water-abundant regions are not necessarily more inclined towards recycled water; promoting water conservation slogans can reduce environmentally poor preferences; many individuals are uncertain about their water type preference.
In addition to promoting conservation, the use of recycled water offers numerous environmental benefits and can also provide a sustainable water supply for municipal, industrial, and agricultural sectors. However, there are members of the public who express their concerns over the adoption of recycled water. This research employs an in-person field study, which combines an incentive-compatible decision task and a detailed survey questionnaire, to analyze respondent?s preferences for recycled versus conventional water across three different uses. Data was collected from 600 participants in three North American cities with varying local drought-conditions. We observe that water abundant regions are not less likely to express preference for recycled water. Results suggest that a slogan promoting water conservation can be effective in dissuading environmentally-poor preferences for closercontact water uses. Additionally, our results suggest that many individuals, especially those with evidence of proenvironmental attitudes, are uncertain of their water type preference. Thus, water conservation initiatives need not consider only people who explicitly state a preference for recycled water as potential adopters but should also recognize these uncertain persons. Extending the de facto definition of ?potential adopter? could have extensive benefits for the success of recycled water initiatives.

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