Carbon-based pricing is emerging as a new lever for changing travel behavior, according to experimental research published in Annals of Tourism Research. Rather than relying on voluntary gestures such as reusing towels, the study tests a market mechanism: guests face costs that scale with their stay’s estimated carbon and resource footprint.
The core idea is simple but technically grounded. If hotels (or short-term rental platforms) track consumption—electricity, heating/cooling, water use, and linen services—then pricing can translate emissions and resource intensity into an itemized bill component. Under such “CO₂-based” systems, higher impact becomes more expensive, while low-impact choices face smaller charges.
Across three experiments designed around realistic booking scenarios, participants reported stronger intentions to conserve energy and water when environmental impact was explicitly tied to what they paid. The effect held even when participants were offered incentive framing that resembled either a discount for lower consumption or a surcharge when consumption exceeded a threshold.
Importantly, the presentation format mattered. Visible surcharges linked to excessive use boosted stated conservation intentions more than equivalent reward-style discounts. In parallel, itemized environmental charges outperformed bundling emissions-related costs into a single total price, suggesting that consumer attention and salience drive behavioral response.
This pattern fits behavioral economics models where perceived fairness, mental accounting, and immediate feedback influence decision-making. By making the environmental “signal” legible during purchase, carbon-linked pricing reduces the gap between intention and action that often undermines purely moral or regulatory messaging.
The researchers argue that these systems can align ecological objectives with business profitability—often termed “green capitalism.” Because smart metering and automated tracking are expanding, carbon pricing could become increasingly personalized, updating charges in near-real time as consumption occurs.
Still, the study measured behavioral intentions rather than verified in-stay behavior, using hypothetical scenarios. The authors call for follow-up work in real tourism settings to test whether intention gains translate into measurable emissions reductions.
Overall, the findings suggest that carbon-based pricing could be a scalable, technology-compatible policy tool for lowering tourism-related resource demand while preserving consumer choice.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Paying for carbon: CO₂-based pricing mechanisms and pro-environmental behavior in tourism
News Publication Date: 22-May-2026
Web References: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160738326000940?via%3Dihub
References: DOI: 10.1016/j.annals.2026.104209
Image Credits: Hanyang University and Professor Hakseung Shin
Keywords: carbon-based pricing; tourism sustainability; behavioral economics; energy conservation; water conservation; resource consumption; environmental surcharges; itemized fees; smart metering; pro-environmental intentions

