The delivery of consumer energy requirements is a key focus of the Smart Systems and Heat Programme.The Consumer Response and Behavior Project will identify consumer requirements and predict consumer response to Smart Energy System proposals, providing a consumer focus for the other Work Areas. This project involved thousands of respondents providing insight into consumer requirements for heat and energy services, both now and in the future. Particular focus was given to identifying the behaviour that leads people to consume energy - in particular heat and hot water. This £3m project was led by PRP Architects, experts in the built environment. It involved a consortium of academia and industry - UCL Energy Institute,Frontier Economics, the Technology Partnership, the Peabody Trust, National Centre for Social Research and Hitachi Europe
This report aims to map the rangeand diversity of heat energy needs and behaviour of domestic consumers in the UK. Drawing on a multi-faceted project of primary consumer research, it also presents an emerging framework for understanding why consumers behave as they do, and how and why these needs and behaviours vary across the population. This study represents one of the first systematic attempts to understand heat energy behaviour in terms of what people are trying to achieve. For the purposes of this report, therefore, we have adopted a broad definition of needs.
Heat energy needs are understood here as what people are aiming to achieve through using heat energy or things they achieve as a consequence of using heat energy. Our aim here is to make it easier to comprehend the full diversity and complexity of needs that exist within the general population and select categories that help us understandwhy households have different priorities.The four categories of needs are as followsHealth and wellbeingResources e.g. finances, wasteAgency -The capacity and willingness of a person to act independently and make choicesRelational dynamics -The social relationship between the individual or household and others, including the wider worldBased on which of these factors are in operation, any given household can be classified as one of three ‘types’, each characterised by a distinct combination and prioritisation of the four needs categories.YOU – decisions made on the basis of the needs of a dependent individual;US – decisions made on the basis of needs of multiple household members;ME – decisions made on the basis o...
This report aims to map the rangeand diversity of heat energy needs and behaviour of domestic consumers in the UK. Drawing on a multi-faceted project of primary consumer research, it also presents an emerging framework for understanding why consumers behave as they do, and how and why these needs and behaviours vary across the population. This study represents one of the first systematic attempts to understand heat energy behaviour in terms of what people are trying to achieve. For the purposes of this report, therefore, we have adopted a broad definition of needs.
Heat energy needs are understood here as what people are aiming to achieve through using heat energy or things they achieve as a consequence of using heat energy. Our aim here is to make it easier to comprehend the full diversity and complexity of needs that exist within the general population and select categories that help us understandwhy households have different priorities.The four categories of needs are as followsHealth and wellbeingResources e.g. finances, wasteAgency -The capacity and willingness of a person to act independently and make choicesRelational dynamics -The social relationship between the individual or household and others, including the wider worldBased on which of these factors are in operation, any given household can be classified as one of three ‘types’, each characterised by a distinct combination and prioritisation of the four needs categories.YOU – decisions made on the basis of the needs of a dependent individual;US – decisions made on the basis of needs of multiple household members;ME – decisions made on the basis o...