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Businesses must inspire the public to make low-carbon choices

Consumers too often the Cinderella of climate change debate says CBI Chief John Cridland The CBI believes that businesses must do more to give consumers the… View Article

GENERAL MERCHANDISE NEWS

Businesses must inspire the public to make low-carbon choices

Consumers too often the Cinderella of climate change debate says CBI Chief John Cridland

The CBI believes that businesses must do more to give consumers the information they need to make informed choices about buying low-carbon products.

Launching a new report, Buying into it – making the consumer case for low-carbon, CBI Director-General John Cridland said that creating a mass market for low-carbon goods is crucial to meeting our ambitious climate change targets.

It comes as a survey of nearly 2,000 people, commissioned for the report, revealed that 83 percent of the public think businesses have a responsibility to tell their customers about energy efficiency, but only 16 percent trust manufacturers and even fewer trust retailers (9%) to be truthful about it.

The CBI is calling on the Government to join forces with businesses to find new ways of inspiring consumers to go green, including developing clear and standardised labelling for low-carbon products.

Cridland said: “Consumers are often baffled when faced with a variety of low-carbon products on sale, each making different green claims.

“All too often we find that consumers are something of a Cinderella of the low-carbon economy. Unless we can get the public truly on board, then all the investment in new technology and all our low-carbon innovation will be for nothing.

“Businesses need to provide clear, consistent labelling that becomes a trusted universal standard with the public. The success of A-G labeling for white goods like fridges and washing machines shows that this kind of approach works.

“It is only when we get significant public buy-in of low-carbon goods that we will make real progress towards our carbon reduction targets.”

The CBI report has found three-quarters of the public do not think about energy efficiency when making the biggest purchase of their lives, a new home, but more than half (53%) do think about energy efficiency when buying a fridge. This reflects the success of the A-G white goods labeling system, which provides clear standardised information on the energy efficiency of white goods.

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