- Posted on 14 Mar 2025
- 62-minute read
What can businesses do when consumers are change resistant? How can companies help promote consumer behavioural change in their efforts to decarbonise supply chains? What power do consumers really have in helping society and organisations make the transition to Net Zero?
We know Australians need to urgently change the way we consume goods and services to reduce our environmental footprints and make more conscious consumption decisions. But despite the urgency of the climate crisis, how business, policymakers and consumers themselves can make the shift to green, more environmentally friendly is still posing a significant challenge.
In this Climate Action Week session, hosted by the UTS Centre for Climate Risk and Resilience and UTS Business School, Australia’s leading thinkers, business leaders and researchers explore the ‘Consumption Conundrum’.
29% of Aussies are now doing something called doom spending, where they're looking at how can I inject a sense of meaning, of pleasure, of distraction into the world that is increasingly feeling out of control.
There's 974,000 Aussies that work more than one job, 72% of Aussies feel pessimistic about their financial future and 70% of young Australians don't think home ownership is in within their reach.
I think in business right now, there is a inevitable challenge in how do you do the right thing for the environment, the right thing to contribute to a more socially equitable community and simultaneously deliver the financial and fiduciary obligations that you also need to deliver.
60 to 70% of the incentives go to people who have already decided on the purchase of an EV and would potentially be able to afford this without any type of incentive, right? So it does create a distortion...for people who are not in a category where they can easily afford these types of investments to really join in on the energy transition.
Speakers
John Lydon, Co-Chair of Australian Climate Leaders’ Coalition, Chair of Generation Australia and Industry Professor, UTS Business School
Catherine King, Chief Strategy Officer, Leo Burnett
- Nicky Sparshott is an experienced CEO, Board Director and change agent, most recently as Global Chief of Transformation at Unilever
- Siobhan Toohill, leading sustainability advisor, including the first Chief Sustainability Officer at a major Australian bank
- Professor Martina Linnenluecke, Director, UTS Centre for Climate Risk and Resilience.
The UTS Centre for Climate Risk and Resilience aims to help businesses address the physical and transition risks bought on by climate change — developing new strategies for value creation and sustainability. Through global research impact, CCRR aims to safeguard the ecosystems and local communities in which businesses operate.
This event was hosted by the UTS Business School. If you are interested in hearing about future events, please contact business.events@uts.edu.au