Behavioural economics

Home energy upgrades: empowering homeowners to make informed decisions

BETA partnered with the Commonwealth Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) to design and test interventions which empower homeowners to take action to upgrade their home’s energy performance.
Complete
Last updated
Trial registration date
Policy area
Energy and environment
Methodology
Online survey experiment
Descriptive survey
Discrete choice experiment
Randomised controlled trial
Behavioural focus
Choice design
Framing and formatting
Information provision
Systems and context
Document type
Report
One page summary
Technical appendix
Partner agencies
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water

Making home energy upgrades can reduce the running cost and greenhouse gas emissions of a home, while increasing comfort for occupants. Identifying the most suitable and cost effective home energy upgrade can be a complex decision, with uncertainty leading to inaction.

BETA partnered with the Commonwealth Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) to design and test interventions which empower homeowners to take action to upgrade their home’s energy performance.

BETA tested five policy interventions using survey experiments with 13,797 Australians to find out what works.

We found that mandatory disclosure of Home Energy ratings helped participants choose to inspect homes with higher energy ratings, and helped sellers prioritise energy upgrades over cosmetic upgrades. Additionally, decision support resources for consumers such as a text prompt or online decision support tool can increase interest or confidence in making an upgrade decision.

Trial start and end dates

16 to 28 May 2024

Ethics approval

Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) Humanities and Social Sciences, Macquarie University. Reference: 15629.

Research participants

13,797

Design

One survey containing five survey experiments (randomised controlled trials).

This trial was pre-registered on the American Economic Association registry: Home energy upgrades survey.

Other

AEA pre-registration