The Avondhu

ALISSA’S ECO-ADVICE

- By Alissa MacMillan

Eco-investigat­or and New Jersey native, Alissa MacMillan, seeks to find answers to your everyday questions about tough decisions we all face, when acting in the best interests for the environmen­t. A freelance writer and philosophy lecturer, Alissa is a former features reporter for the New York Daily News and has been living in County Limerick for eight years. Your queries on all matters environmen­tal, are welcome. This week, she focuses on:

THE POWER OF ADVERTISEM­ENTS

Q: I sometimes kick myself for buying certain things and come home from the shop filled with regret and the realisatio­n that I’ve only added waste to my home. Any tips for practicing some willpower when I’m shopping?

A: How many times have we been wooed by the deals: Buy two packs of strawberri­es for €5, when one is €2.99? Seems an attractive offer, but what good is it if the second sits in the fridge and rots? We are faced with these temptation­s all the time and your question is a great one: How much agency do we have when we’re bombarded with messages about what to buy, even if we don’t need it? Advertisin­g works, so how do we resist?

Dr. Mary McCarthy, Professor of Marketing at the Cork University Business School UCC, explains that shops know what they’re doing, which can be a good or a bad thing.

“When we enter a retail store, they are very well laid out and visually stimulatin­g,” says McCarthy, the set-up “used as mechanisms to guide us through the store and purchase things.” We might not have wanted that green shirt, but it was displayed just so, triggers that “can assist us but equally they can cause us to buy things we have no plan to consume.”

McCarthy notes there is a “dynamic” between you and the offer, different people encounteri­ng offers with different perspectiv­es: “Two people could see something on special offer, one could buy on planned impulse and integrate it in, another on pure impulse, and waste it,” says McCarthy, and “waste is an environmen­tal cost.”

At the same time, “Retail can act as a good mechanism for supporting local, seasonal produce and supporting the environmen­t in ways that we’re not aware of,” explains McCarthy. Small changes, like reducing the size of packaging and offering more plant-based options, are examples of suppliers and retailers responding to customers’ concerns.

The relationsh­ip goes two ways and McCarthy says that retailers and supply chain members are taking action all the time to be more sustainabl­e.

“If I were to be very generous, in a sense the individual has some responsibi­lity, but retailers, suppliers, and manufactur­ers have a bigger responsibi­lity.”

Even the advertisin­g industry itself, which has its own initiative to reduce its carbon footprint, Ad Net Zero, has some responsibi­lity.

PLANNING & FLEXIBILIT­Y

There is another layer of complexity to the story: in essence, we consumers are spoiled rotten. There are certain things we want and expect in our everyday life at the moment, explains McCarthy, and retailers adapt and adjust products to our desires. We have come to expect wide and constant availabili­ty, McCarthy says, “we are over-provisioni­ng,” and we get annoyed if things aren’t available. “That’s how our model, with regard to individual satisfacti­on, has developed and evolved. But the reality of nature is, there is no consistenc­y in quality or availabili­ty.”

One of the first tricks to overcoming the sway of marketing is planning, says McCarthy. Have a shopping list, an idea of what you’ll be using and when, and consider how soon items might go off.

“Planning prevents unplanned purchases and makes you more immune to external influences from the environmen­t.”

With planning, you also might, ironically, have more room to be impulsive, knowing exactly how you can use something that’s on offer.

Being conscious of your surroundin­gs, the context of the environmen­t, and your own habits is also key. “The more aware we are of our environmen­t and triggers around us, the more control we have of our purchases,” says McCarthy. An awareness of your own purchasing habits and patterns, of what you need and what fits with your life, can lead to “good decisions for ourselves, in relation to the value of money, in relation to health, and in relation to sustainabi­lity.” Those two packs of strawberri­es for €5, if gone uneaten, are “not a financial savings and have a negative impact on the environmen­t.”

Also helpful is a dose of flexibilit­y, a willingnes­s to be creative around what to do with food. You might know you’re making vegetable soup, but are open-minded about which vegetables to make it with.

Of course, lifestyles vary. “Consumers and citizens are at different life stages in the amount of time and effort they want to put into being sustainabl­e,” McCarthy says. The very time-conscious and busy might not care, but those who are very concerned about the environmen­t will be able to take other steps. For consumers at any stage, McCarthy suggests online shopping as “a good way to avoid impulse buying.”

As for your willpower, “Unless those environmen­ts change, we will continue to be influenced in ways we’re not even aware of,” says McCarthy. “If it’s not there, you can’t buy it. If it is, you can.”

In the meantime, we can take steps to shop wisely and resist the waste-generating temptation­s.

Direct your eco related queries for Alissa to info@avondhupre­ss.ie (with ‘Alissa’s Eco-advice’ in the subject line)

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 ?? (Pic: SEMRA) ?? SEMRA were on hand on Sunday in the Galtees to aid an injured walker off the peaks.
(Pic: SEMRA) SEMRA were on hand on Sunday in the Galtees to aid an injured walker off the peaks.

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