Indian consumers feel the
most guilty about their environmental impact even though they have a
smaller average footprint than consumers in wealthy countries, a survey
said Thursday.
The 17-nation study by the Washington-based National Geographic Society
found a "major disconnect" as consumers in rich nations had the least
sustainable lifestyles but also felt the least guilty about their
impact.
The " Greendex"
found that Indians had the most sustainable behavior, followed by
Chinese and Brazilians. Americans ranked the worst, with Canadians
coming second to last. The French ranked last in Europe.
Despite coming out on top, 45 per cent of Indians -- more than any other
nationality surveyed -- said they felt guilty about their impact on the
environment. They were followed by Mexicans and Chinese, with 42 per
cent of consumers in each country expressing guilt.
"Consumers
in these large emerging economies are the most likely to report that
environmental problems are having a negative impact on their health
today," the study said.
Americans were among the least
sensitive about their impact, with 21 per cent saying they felt guilty.
Even fewer Australians and Germans felt guilty, with the Japanese
placing last with 14 per cent voicing guilt over their behavior.
The survey ranked nations based on consumption patterns in food, transportation and housing.
Indians were ranked as having the most sustainable behavior in part due
to the cultural taboo about eating beef, whose production is a major
source of carbon emissions blamed for climate change. Mexicans and
Japanese had the biggest environmental impact through food, according to
the study.
Indians also had the least impact in housing,
followed by Brazilians who were by far the most likely to say they
bought electricity from green sources. Biofuels are a major industry in
Brazil.
Chinese consumers had the least environmental impact
per capita from transportation, according to the study. Americans and
Canadians ranked as having the most impact in both housing and
transportation.
The polling was conducted by research consultancy GlobeScan, which surveyed around 1,000 people in each country.
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