Energy consumption of the purchased item in use was the most important factor for 46 per cent of respondents, followed by just over a fifth (21 per cent) who believe the cost of the item outweighs any environmental considerations.
A total of 15 per cent of respondents looked to the embodied carbon emitted during the production of an item, followed by five per cent who consider the emissions generated when transporting consumer goods.
The remaining 13 per cent opted for ‘none of the above’, including John Hartley who would’ve liked to have seen a ‘cradle to grave’ option.
“Remember the shock when the Jeep Wrangler was named greenest car a few years ago?’ John said. “Its fuel consumption was high, but it was a simple design to manufacture & recycle, so over its life, it was greener than an electric or hybrid car.”
Ekij suggested that ‘cost’ is misleading. “I try and look at total running cost which is a combination of purchase cost and day-to-day running cost,” said Ekij. “Alas I would struggle to believe the carbon or energy used in manufacture as these are too easy to lie about.”
“The accounting of ‘carbon footprint’ is almost impossible to evaluate,” said Sandy. “We can’t make solar panels without making glass, extracting semiconductor materials, mining copper etc, likewise we can’t make wind turbines without carbon fibres, resin , concrete , steel, digging holes etc. Measuring the carbon oxides produced during manufacture of a vehicle takes no account of the production sites and processes necessary to produce the glass, plastics, paint, wiring and steel or aluminium. We have to face it, we are too numerous and we consume too much.”
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