Sustainable consumption

It is the product of individual and collective decisions about aspirations and about satisfying needs and adopting practices, which are in turn conditioned, facilitated, and constrained by societal norms, political institutions, public policies, infrastructures, markets, and culture."[3] The United Nations includes analyses of efficiency, infrastructure, and waste, as well as access to basic services, green and decent jobs, and a better quality of life for all within the concept of sustainable consumption.Such changes may result in more sustainable lifestyles, along with associated products, services and expenditures,[8] being structurally supported and becoming sufficiently prevalent and effective in terms of collective greenhouse gas emission reductions.[10] The environmental impacts of meat production (and dairy) are large: raising animals for human consumption accounts for approximately 40% of the total amount of agricultural output in industrialized countries.[26][11] In June 2023, science advisors in the European Commission's Scientific Advice Mechanism came to the identical conclusion, finding that "our diets need to shift towards more plant-based ingredients, rich in vegetables, fruits, wholegrains and pulses.[32] The app CodeCheck gives versed smartphone users some capability to scan ingredients in food, drinks and cosmetics for filtering out some of the products that are legal but nevertheless unhealthy or unsustainable from their consumption/purchases.Footprints of nondomestic production are significant: for instance, a study concluded that PM2.5 air pollution induced by the contemporary free trade and consumption by the 19 G20 nations causes two million premature deaths annually, suggesting that the average lifetime consumption of about ~28 people in these countries causes at least one premature death (average age ~67) while developing countries "cannot be expected" to implement or be able to implement countermeasures without external support or internationally coordinated efforts.High-income individuals usually have higher energy footprints as they disproportionally use their larger financial resources – which they can usually spend freely in their entirety for any purpose as long as the end user purchase is legal – for energy-intensive goods.[54] Degrowth refers to economic paradigms that address the need to reduce global consumption and production whereby metrics and mechanisms like GDP are replaced by more reality-attached measures such as of health, social and environmental well-being and more needs-based[55][56][57] structures.[64] Economic concepts by which scholarly literature approaches problems such as overconsumption, using this terminology to characterize broad, typically conceptual-stage, solution-proposals include:[65][66] Some writers make a distinction between "strong" and "weak" sustainability.Strong sustainable consumption approaches also pay attention to the social dimension of well-being and assess the need for changes based on a risk-averse perspective.[75] Following a Vermont State Legislature ban on disposable glass products, plastic corporations banded together to form the Keep America Beautiful organization in order to encourage individual actions and discourage regulation.[clarification needed][76] This is evident in the United Nations Paris Agreement goal of maintaining average global warming to optimistically 1.5 °C, and at least below a threshold of 2.0 °C.Private solutions labeled as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) strive to incorporate sustainability concerns into market supply and demand forces by increasing the transparency of productive processes, as well as awareness of ecological footprints of consumption.[79] An alternative approach adopts polycentric governance strategies across governmental institutions and non-governmental organizations to achieve greater citizen engagement and self-governance systems.Irish consumer confidence fell, sparking a cultural shift in second-hand markets and charities, stressing sustainability and drawing on a narrative surrounding economic recovery[clarification needed].[87] Specifically, targets 12.1 and 12.A of SDG 12 aim to implement frameworks and support developing countries in order to "move towards more sustainable patterns of consumption and production".
Per capita annual meat consumption by region [ 11 ]
Life-cycle assessment of GHG emissions for foods
Average greenhouse gas emissions by food product [ 11 ]
Non-intervention in processes related to beef (and soy) production [ 12 ] [ 13 ] [ 14 ] [ 15 ] via policies may be a main driver of tropical deforestation.
Comparison of footprint-based and transboundary pollution-based relationships among G20 nations for the number of PM 2.5 -related premature deaths. [ 41 ]
Support for education on sustainable consumption as a priority for respondents to the European Investment Bank Climate Survey.
Anti-consumerismAsceticismAffluenzaAlternative cultureAnti-capitalismAutonomous buildingBillboard hackingBuyer's remorseBioeconomicsBuddhist economicsBuy Nothing DayCollaborative consumptionCollapsologyCommodificationCommodity fetishismCommuneCompulsive buying disorderConspicuous consumptionConsumer capitalismConsumerismConvivialityCriticism of advertisingCulture jammingDo it yourselfDownshiftingDurable goodEarth Overshoot DayEcological economicsEcovillageEthical consumerismFeminist political ecologyFood loss and wasteFreeganismGift economyGreen consumptionHyperconsumerismLaconophiliaLocal foodMicrogenerationNon-possessionOverconsumptionPlanned obsolescenceRight to repairPolitical ecologyPost-consumerismSimple livingSlow FoodSteady-state economySubvertisingSustainable consumer behaviourWaldenThe Theory of the Leisure ClassBrave New WorldThe Affluent SocietyOne-Dimensional ManSteal This BookSmall Is BeautifulTo Have or to Be?Future Primitive and Other EssaysEscape from AffluenzaNo LogoProfit over People: Neoliberalismand Global OrderThe Cultural CreativesEvasionThe CorporationSo, What's Your Price?What Would Jesus Buy?AdbustersCrimethInc.Deep Green ResistanceDemocracy Now!Earth Liberation FrontFifth EstateFreecycleGreen AnarchyInstitute for Social EcologyMonthly ReviewRage Against the MachineReverend BillyThe Venus ProjectThe Yes Men350.orgMauro BonaiutiNoam ChomskyErich FrommNicholas Georgescu-RoegenEdward GoldsmithPaul GoodmanAndré GorzIvan IllichSerge LatoucheDonella MeadowsPierre RabhiJohn RuskinE. F. SchumacherBernard StieglerHenry David ThoreauAlter-globalizationAmateurismAnarcho-communismAnarcho-primitivismAnarcho-punkAnti-corporate activismAnti-globalization movementCommunismDiggers (theater)EcofeminismEco-socialismEnvironmentalismFood Not BombsFossil fuel phase-outGreen anarchismGreen leftGreen politicsHippieLibertarian socialismNeo-LuddismNew LeftOccupy Wall StreetPostmodernismSituationistsSlow movementSocial anarchismSocial ecologyAdvanced capitalismAdvertisingBarterConsumer behaviourConsumption (economics)Consumption (sociology)CooperativeCountercultureDisneyficationEconomic materialismFrugalityGreen economyGross National HappinessHeterodox economicsHospExInfluence of mass mediaInformal sectorIntentional communityLeft-wing politicsMcDonaldizationMutual aidNatural resource economicsNon-monetary economyPermaculturePost-materialismProductivismShoppingSubsistence economySustainabilitySweatshopsVeblen goodWorkaholicimpacts on the environmentfuture generationssustainable productionsustainable lifestylesecologicalinfrastructurescultureUnited Nationssustainable developmentclimate changeresource depletionfaminesenvironmental pollutionuse of resourcespollutionrenewable resourcesupcyclingproduct life-cyclesIntergenerationalGoal 12Sustainable Development GoalsSustainable productsSustainable food systemsystemic changeroot-cause system changessubstantial impact on global warmingnationroad vehiclesCO2 emissionsemissions embedded in importsmeat consumptionLife-cycle assessmentsLife-cycle assessmentenvironmental impacts of meat productionemissions databasefood systemsGHG emissionsfood vs. feedfood securitysustainable dietsNovel foodscultured meatmicrobial foodsground-up insectspet foodanimal feedreduce environmental impactsreviewEuropean CommissionScientific Advice Mechanismsustainability standards and certificationorganic foodenergy efficiency classEuropean UnionUnited Kingdomfinancial considerationsgreenwashingonlinebikingProduce traceabilitydematerializationDigital Product Passportgreenhouse gas emissionsemissions reductioncarbon leakageCarbon Border Adjustment Mechanismair pollutionTransparency of supply chainsdeforestationPolicytheories of change"green" according to an EU governmental body-created "taxonomy"eco-tariffsenergy footprintsTheory of changeGlobal commonsHealth policySustainable designChoice editingPersonal Carbon AllowancesrationDegrowthwellbeinglabour, workgreen jobcertificationjob evaluationretrainingdid not decreasesharing economycircular economyDoughnut economyplanetary boundariesCommunity economy and commonsGemeinwohl-ÖkonomieUnited Nations Conference on Environment and DevelopmentEarth Summiteco-efficienteco-efficiencyresource consumptionwell-beingattitude-behaviourvalues-action gapcognitiveinterwar periodsecondhand goodsThe Great DepressionVermont State LegislatureKeep America BeautifulEnvironmental educationMedia policySolutions journalismParis Agreementmarket failureCorporate Social Responsibilitycap and tradepolycentric governanceUnited Nations Sustainable Development Goal 12eco-friendlyFinancial crisis of 2007–2008Anti-AusteritySDG 12UN Economic and Social CouncilUnited Nations Environment ProgramHuman Development ReportUN Development ProgramWorld Summit on Sustainable DevelopmentCopenhagen Business SchoolBolognause public transportmanage energy wellSustainable consumer behaviorDurable goodsGroup decision-makingProduct designConsumer CouncilRogelj, JoeriBibcodeUniversity of BonnEUR-LexProQuestOutlineAnthropoceneGlobal governanceHuman impact on the environmentDevelopmentAnthropizationEcological footprintEthicalMicro-sustainabilityOver-consumptionProduct stewardshipSocial return on investmentMarketing myopiaSustainableMarketSystemic change resistanceTragedy of the commonsWorld populationDemographic transitionFamily planningControlSustainable populationAppropriateEnvironmental technologyNatural buildingSustainable architectureSustainable industriesSustainable packagingBiodiversityBiosecurityBiosphereConservation biologyEndangered speciesHolocene extinctionInvasive speciesEnergyCarbon footprintRenewable energySustainable energyCivic agricultureClimate-smart agricultureCommunity-supported agricultureSustainable agricultureSustainable dietSustainable fisheryAir well (condenser)BioretentionBioswaleBlue roofCatchwaterConstructed wetlandDetention basinDew pondFootprintHydroelectricityHydropowerInfiltration basinIrrigation tankMarine energyMicro hydroOcean thermal energy conversionPico hydroRain gardenRainwater harvestingRainwater tankReclaimed waterRetention basinRun-of-the-river hydroelectricityScarcitySecuritySmall hydroSustainable drainage systemTidal powerTidal stream generatorTree box filterWater conservationWater heat recyclingWater recycling showerWater-sensitive urban designCorporate environmental responsibilityEnvironmental accountingEnvironmental full-cost accountingEnvironmental planningAccountingMeasurementMetrics and indicesReportingStandards and certificationSustainable yieldBusinessClimate financeCommunityDisinvestmentEco-capitalismEco-citiesEco-investingEnvironmental financeConstructionFashionFinanceGardeningGeoparkInfrastructureMarketingGreen roofGreeningImpact investingLandscapeLivelihoodLivingOrganic movementOrganizationsProcurementRefurbishmentSocially responsible businessSocially responsible marketingSanitationSourcingSustainability organizationTourismTransportUrban drainage systemsUrban infrastructureSustainable managementEnvironmentalFisheriesForestHumanistic capitalismMaterialsNatural resourcePlanetaryRecyclingUN Conference on the Human Environment (Stockholm 1972)Brundtlandt Commission Report (1983)Our Common Future (1987)Earth Summit (1992)Rio Declaration on Environment and DevelopmentAgenda 21 (1992)Convention on Biological Diversity (1992)Lisbon PrinciplesEarth CharterUN Millennium Declaration (2000)Earth Summit 2002UN Conference on Sustainable DevelopmentScienceStudiesDegreesEnvironmental social scienceEcological anthropologyEnvironmental anthropologyEnvironmental crimeEnvironmental economicsEnvironmental communicationEnvironmental historyEnvironmental politicsEnvironmental psychologyEnvironmental sociologyHuman ecologyHuman geographyRegional scienceAgroecologyAnthrozoologyBehavioral geographyCommunity studiesDemographyEcological humanitiesthermoeducationethicsjusticeracismEthnobiologybotanyecologyzoologyForestryIndustrial ecologyIntegrated geographyPolitical representation of natureRural sociologySexecologyScience, technology and societyscience studiesSystems ecologygeographymetabolismEcopsychologyGreen criminologyepidemiologyoccupationalpublicland useregionalspatialJournalsResearch institutesPopulationDemographics of the worldEstimates of historical world populationPopulation growthPopulation momentumProjections of population growthPopulationbiologyPopulation declinePopulation densityPhysiological densityPopulation dynamicsPopulation modelPopulation pyramidPopulationecologyBiocapacityCarrying capacityI = P × A  × TKaya identityMalthusian growth modelOvershoot (population)World3 modelEugenicsDysgenicsHuman overpopulationMalthusian catastropheHuman population planningCompulsory sterilizationOne-child policyTwo-child policyPolitical demographyPopulation ethicsAntinatalismMere addition paradoxNatalismNon-identity problemReproductive rightsZero population growthPopulation and EnvironmentPopulation and Development ReviewPopulation and housing censuses by countryLargest citiesWorld population milestones6 billionPopulation concern organizations7 Billion ActionsChurch of EuthanasiaInternational Conference on Population and DevelopmentPopulation Action InternationalPopulation ConnectionPopulation MattersUnited Nations Population FundUnited Nations world population conferencesVoluntary Human Extinction MovementWorld Population ConferenceWorld Population DayWorld Population FoundationBennett's lawGreen RevolutionMigration