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Influence Paths and Group Differences in Residents’ Low-Carbon Behaviors in China’s Pilot Cities: A Perspective on Policy Perception and Information Dissemination

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  • Yi Chen

    (School of Public Administration, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, China)

  • Yinrong Chen

    (School of Public Administration, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, China)

Abstract

Based on structural equation modeling, the influence paths and group differences in residents’ low-carbon living behaviors and consumption behaviors were explored in six low-carbon pilot cities in China from the perspectives of low-carbon policy perception and low-carbon information dissemination. The results showed that residents in different pilot cities significantly differed in their low-carbon intention and low-carbon behavior, especially in Hangzhou and Chengdu, which had high low-carbon intention and low-carbon behavior. Low-carbon intention was the core driving force that promoted residents’ low-carbon behavior. Low-carbon policy perception and information dissemination impacted residents’ low-carbon intention and low-carbon behavior, with differences among different pilot cities. Residents in Chengdu and Wuhan showed a significant positive correlation in the direct and indirect paths of low-carbon policy perception on low-carbon behavior. In contrast, residents in Hangzhou showed a significant positive correlation in the impact path of low-carbon information dissemination on low-carbon consumption behavior. In addition, groups with different demographic characteristics significantly differed in the influence paths of their low-carbon behavior. Finally, targeted recommendations were proposed to promote differentiated strategies for implementing low-carbon behaviors, aiming to enhance public awareness and action capacity and support China’s low-carbon transition and carbon reduction goals.

Suggested Citation

  • Yi Chen & Yinrong Chen, 2025. "Influence Paths and Group Differences in Residents’ Low-Carbon Behaviors in China’s Pilot Cities: A Perspective on Policy Perception and Information Dissemination," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 17(24), pages 1-23, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:17:y:2025:i:24:p:10952-:d:1812648
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