Energy-Efficient Real Estate or How It Is Perceived by Potential Homebuyers in Four Latin American Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Scoping Review: Consumer’s Perspective
2.1. Study Selection
2.2. Perception and Attitudes
2.3. Information Asymmetry and Barriers
3. Standards, Certifications and Incentives in Latin-America
3.1. Between the Carrot and the Stick: Energy Efficiency Regulations
3.2. The Normative Context in four Latin American Countries
4. Methodology
5. Results
5.1. Global Priorities: Environment Preservation versus Economic Development
5.2. National Development Priorities: Environment Protection versus Social Protection
5.3. Family Priorities: Higher Family Income versus Better Health Conditions
5.4. Role of Public versus Private Sector in Promoting Energy Efficiency
5.5. Role of User’s Habits versus Technology as Factors that Influence the Residential Energy Efficiency
5.6. Thermal Comfort versus Energy Saving as Priorities for Buying a House with Sustainable Criteria
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors | Title | Country | Category |
---|---|---|---|
[18] | Analysing sustainability certification systems in the German housing sector from a theory of social institutions | Germany | Certificate, labels |
[19] | On the economics of energy labels in the housing market | Netherlands | |
[20] | Market response to the public display of energy performance rating at property sales | Denmark | |
[21] | The price of energy efficiency in the Spanish housing market | Spain | |
[22] | Building energy efficiency: An overview of the Brazilian residential labeling scheme | Brazil | |
[23] | Real Estate market, energy rating and cost. Reflections about an Italian case study | Italy | |
[24] | Energy performance certificates—Informing the informed or the indifferent? | Norway | |
[25] | Does Voluntary Disclosure Create a Green Lemon Problem? Energy-Efficiency Ratings and House Prices | Australia | Price premium |
[26] | Does the housing market value energy efficient homes? Evidence from the energy star program | USA | |
[27] | Energy efficiency and economic value in affordable housing | Netherlands | |
[28] | Green signalling effects in the market for energy- efficient residential buildings | Finland | |
[29] | A comparative study of theoretical behaviour change models predicting empirical evidence for residential energy conservation behaviours | Global | Consumer´s perspective, willingness to pay |
[30] | Beyond energy efficiency and individual behaviours: policy insights from social practice theories | Global | |
[31] | Spatial variation in energy attitudes and perceptions: Evidence from Europe | EU | |
[32] | Determinants of Southern Italian households’ intention to adopt energy efficiency measures in residential buildings | Italy | |
[33] | Willingness to pay for energy-saving measures in residential building | Switzerland | |
[34] | Behavior Driven Energy Efficiency: A Customized Feedback Approach | USA | |
[35] | U.S. consumer attitudes and expectations about energy | USA | |
[3] | Risk preferences and purchase of energy-efficient technologies in the residential sector | USA | |
[36] | New homebuyers and the challenges of navigating sustainability and energy efficiency with Australian volume builders | Australia | |
[37] | Low-carbon homes, thermal comfort and household practices: Uplifting the energy-efficiency discourse | Australia | |
[38] | Preferences for sustainable, liveable and resilient neighbourhoods and homes: A case of Canberra, Australia | Australia | |
[39] | Does energy efficiency matter to real estate-consumers? Survey evidence on willingness to pay from a cost-optimal analysis in the context of a developing country | Chile | |
[6] | The role of information for energy efficiency in the residential sector | Global | Asymmetric information |
[40] | Improving information gathering and distribution on sustainability features in the Australian residential property market | Australia | |
[41] | Sustainability Attributes in Real Estate Development: Private Perspectives on Advancing Energy Regulation in a Liberalized Market | Chile | |
[42] | Energy efficiency policy evaluation by moving from techno-economic towards whole society perspective on energy efficiency market | Global | Energy efficiency market |
[43] | Energy efficiency services for residential buildings: market situation and existing potentials in the European Union | EU | |
[44] | Is energy efficiency capitalized into home prices? Evidence from three U.S. cities | USA | |
[45] | Economic returns to energy-efficient investments in the housing market: Evidence from Singapore | Singapore |
Surveys | Argentina | Brazil | Chile | México |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sent | 30,000 | 30,000 | 30,000 | 30,000 |
Received | 542 | 498 | 473 | 195 |
Valid1 | 314 | 396 | 399 | 153 |
Completed2 | 183 | 268 | 292 | 97 |
Question | Answers | |
---|---|---|
Left | Right | |
Where do you situate yourself about development and environment priorities at the global level? | Environment preservation | Economic development |
Where do you situate yourself about the public policies priorities of your country? | Environment protection | Social protection |
Where do you situate yourself about the priorities of your family? | Better health conditions | Higher family income |
Who do you think is responsible for promoting energy efficiency of housing in your country? | Public sector | Private sector |
What factors do you think to have more influence on the energy efficiency of your house? | User´s habits | Technology |
What aspects would you consider priorities when buying a house designed with sustainable criteria? | Thermal comfort | Energy savings |
Question | Answers | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
What is your age | 18–30 years old | 30–45 years old | 45–65 years old | Over 65 years old | |
Which gender do you identify most? | Male | Female | I would prefer not to comment | ||
What is the highest study level you have completed? | School | Technical degree | University degree | Postgraduate degree (e.g., master, PhD) | |
How do you define your household? | Household of one person | Couple without children | Couple with children younger than 6 | Couple with children between 6 to 18 | Couple with children older than 18 |
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Encinas, F.; Marmolejo-Duarte, C.; Wagemann, E.; Aguirre, C. Energy-Efficient Real Estate or How It Is Perceived by Potential Homebuyers in Four Latin American Countries. Sustainability 2019, 11, 3531. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133531
Encinas F, Marmolejo-Duarte C, Wagemann E, Aguirre C. Energy-Efficient Real Estate or How It Is Perceived by Potential Homebuyers in Four Latin American Countries. Sustainability. 2019; 11(13):3531. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133531
Chicago/Turabian StyleEncinas, Felipe, Carlos Marmolejo-Duarte, Elizabeth Wagemann, and Carlos Aguirre. 2019. "Energy-Efficient Real Estate or How It Is Perceived by Potential Homebuyers in Four Latin American Countries" Sustainability 11, no. 13: 3531. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133531
APA StyleEncinas, F., Marmolejo-Duarte, C., Wagemann, E., & Aguirre, C. (2019). Energy-Efficient Real Estate or How It Is Perceived by Potential Homebuyers in Four Latin American Countries. Sustainability, 11(13), 3531. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133531