App-based interventions are increasingly used to foster energy-sufficient household routines. Previous studies rarely measure whether the effect persists in the long-term, and for the few that have, the savings effects – often estimated without a control group – are not maintained over time. To favour long-lasting effects, we posit that (i) app users should be engaged in the app design, (ii) apps should focus on collective-level features that support community building (rather than individual-level consumption feedback only), and (iii) specific app features are needed in the long-term to resist relapse. We assess the overall effect of these strategies in the “Social Power Plus Community Energy Challenge”, an app-based intervention run in 2022 in Switzerland involving about 200 voluntary households. Quasi-experimental estimates under a weighted Difference-in-Differences approach show that on average the intervention produced nearly 5% energy savings over one full year. However, the effect was higher in the first quarter (up to 11% energy saving), becoming negligible in the last quarters. We reflect on how the three strategies did not ensure long-term effects and recommend future research to further explore the potential of community-based processes, focusing less on apps and more on collectively questioning dominant social norms around household routines.

Cellina, F., Gerosa, T., Granato, P., Lobsiger-Kagi, E., Wemyss, D., Kienast, P. (2024). Can app-based communities support energy sufficiency in households? Evidence from a one-year quasi-experiment in Switzerland. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 114(1 November 2024) [10.1016/j.scs.2024.105771].

Can app-based communities support energy sufficiency in households? Evidence from a one-year quasi-experiment in Switzerland

Cellina F.;
2024

Abstract

App-based interventions are increasingly used to foster energy-sufficient household routines. Previous studies rarely measure whether the effect persists in the long-term, and for the few that have, the savings effects – often estimated without a control group – are not maintained over time. To favour long-lasting effects, we posit that (i) app users should be engaged in the app design, (ii) apps should focus on collective-level features that support community building (rather than individual-level consumption feedback only), and (iii) specific app features are needed in the long-term to resist relapse. We assess the overall effect of these strategies in the “Social Power Plus Community Energy Challenge”, an app-based intervention run in 2022 in Switzerland involving about 200 voluntary households. Quasi-experimental estimates under a weighted Difference-in-Differences approach show that on average the intervention produced nearly 5% energy savings over one full year. However, the effect was higher in the first quarter (up to 11% energy saving), becoming negligible in the last quarters. We reflect on how the three strategies did not ensure long-term effects and recommend future research to further explore the potential of community-based processes, focusing less on apps and more on collectively questioning dominant social norms around household routines.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
App; Energy sufficiency; Energy transition; Household; Quasi-experiment;
English
6-set-2024
2024
114
1 November 2024
105771
none
Cellina, F., Gerosa, T., Granato, P., Lobsiger-Kagi, E., Wemyss, D., Kienast, P. (2024). Can app-based communities support energy sufficiency in households? Evidence from a one-year quasi-experiment in Switzerland. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 114(1 November 2024) [10.1016/j.scs.2024.105771].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/530506
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