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eceee 2007 Summer Study on energy efficiency: Saving energy – Just do it!

Panel Panel 9: Dynamics of consumption

Campaign effects and self-analysis Internet tool
Birgitte Brange, Danish Electricity Saving Trust, Denmark
Troels Fjordbak Larsen, IT Energy ApS, Denmark
Göran Wilke, Danish Electricity Saving Trust, Denmark

How many people actually see the price signal? Quantifying market failures in the end use of energy
Alan Meier, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Anita Eide, European Commission, Energy Efficiency Unit

Personal air and car travel – just don’t do it!
Christian Brand, Transport Studies Unit, Oxford University, Centre for the Environment, UK

Rising electricity consumption: Driving forces and consequences. The case of rural Zanzibar
Tanja Winther, Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM), University of Oslo, Norway

A social capital approach to household energy consumption
Megan McMichael, School of Construction Management and Engineering, The University of Reading, United Kingdom

Can consumers save energy? Results from surveys of consumer adoption and use of low and zero carbon technologies
Horace Herring, Design Innovation Group, Faculty of Technology, The Open University, United-Kingdom
Sally Caird, Design Innovation Group, Faculty of Technology, The Open University, United-Kingdom
Robin Roy, Design Innovation Group, Faculty of Technology, The Open University, United-Kingdom

Zero and low energy homes in New Zealand: The value of non-energy benefits and their use in attracting homeowners
Albrecht Stoecklein, BRANZ, New Zealand
Lisa Skumatz, Skumatz Economic Research Associates (SERA), USA

Energy-related intervention success factors: a literature review
Diana Uitdenbogerd, Wageningen University, The Netherlands
Cees Egmond, SenterNovem, The Netherlands
Ruud Jonkers, Rescon, The Netherlands
Gerjo Kok, Maastricht University, The Netherlands

Are we done yet? An assessment of the remaining barriers to increasing compact fluorescent lamp installations and recommended program strategies for reducing them
Tami Rasmussen, KEMA Inc., Sustainable Market Strategies Group, U.S.A.
Jennifer Canseco, KEMA Inc., Sustainable Market Strategies Group, U.S.A.
Rob Rubin, San Diego Gas & Electric Company, U.S.A.
Anu Teja, Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance, U.S.A.

Influencing electricity consumption via consumer feedback: a review of experience
Corinna Fischer, Forschungsstelle für Umweltpolitik, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany

Dynamics of household energy use in India: Economic and environmental implications
B. Sudhakara Reddy, Indira Gandhi institute of Development Research, Mumbai, India

Who benefits? The impacts of time-of-use electricity pricing on demographic groups in Ontario, Canada
Jennifer Robinson, University of Waterloo, CANADA
Ian H. Rowlands, University of Waterloo, CANADA

Consumer behaviour in Swedish households: routines and habits in everyday life
Anna Green, Tema Technology and social change, Linköping University, Sweden
Kajsa Ellegård, Tema Technology and social change, Linköping University, Sweden

BEHAVE. Meta-evaluation of communicative programmes aimed at consumers
Renée Bruel, SenterNovem, The Netherlands

Internet-based tools for behaviour change
Catherine Bottrill, Environmental Change Institute, Oxford Unversity Centre for the Environment, United Kingdom