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- Behavioural insights can curb water overuse by addressing cognitive biases and complementing regulation with nudges, feedback, and social norms.
By Carlos Gaston Scartascini, Karina Olenka Stella Marquez Guerra
Highlights
- Water scarcity is rising, even in water‑rich regions, making individual consumption behaviour as important as regulation and infrastructure.
- Behaviour biases like present bias and inattention drive overuse, limiting the impact of traditional policy tools alone.
- Evidence shows behaviour interventions, like feedback, social comparisons, defaults, and commitments, can significantly reduce water consumption when tailored to context.
For years, we’ve heard the same message: water is a limited resource; use it responsibly. And yet, it was easy to ignore. Even though water scarcity has long affected some regions, in many cases severely, it was difficult to square that reality with our daily lives, so our behaviour barely changed.
In recent years, however, the problem of water scarcity has become much harder to avoid. Even Latin America and the Caribbean, a region abundant in water resources, has experienced intense droughts, a shift that has stoked public concern and pushed governments to search for solutions.
The role of behaviour in sustainable water consumption
Most existing strategies to address water overconsumption have focused on structural measures and regulatory frameworks, including pricing mechanisms, infrastructure investments, and usage restrictions. Achieving water sustainability, however, involves not only understanding the availability of water resources; it also requires examining the behaviours that affect consumption. Even with strong regulations and incentives, success in curbing excessive water use will depend on the individual decisions people make. This is where behavioural economics becomes particularly relevant.
Consider a simple, everyday example. Have you ever decided to take a short shower because you were aware of how much water a long shower can waste, only to immediately forget your resolve once the water started flowing? Did you briefly wonder how many liters you used?
This reflects two well-known behavioural biases. First, present bias: the immediate comfort of the shower is more powerful to our minds than the benefit of conserving the resource. Second, cognitive overload: our brains are occupied with many other thoughts as we shower. We are unlikely to actively translate minutes under the shower to liters of water consumed.
We underestimate the impact of our actions, assume that small behaviours do not matter, or believe that we won’t be directly afflicted by drought.
Overcoming Cognitive Biases
This is where behavioural economics comes in. To overcome these cognitive biases, it’s important to design policies and interventions that take them into account. For that reason, we recently developed a monograph that explores how behavioural insights can be applied to sustainable water management, based on real-world evidence.
Behavioural interventions have addressed a range of barriers to water conservation. They use tools that reshape information, social expectations, and everyday decision environments. In Costa Rica, adding a sticker to water bills showing households whether they consumed more or less than their neighbours reduced water use by nearly 5 percent. In Colombia, reports comparing households to efficient neighbours produced a 6.8 percent decline. Meanwhile, Australia’s Target 140 campaign combined goal-setting and feedback to achieve a 28 percent reduction in water use.
Strategies highlighted in the monograph span a diverse set of behaviorally informed approaches. Some, as in the previous examples, focus on increasing awareness through feedback on water consumption or leverage social norms by enabling comparisons with peers. Additional interventions encourage public commitments through community-based initiatives or apply nudging techniques, such as setting water-saving options as the default in appliances.
The monograph showcases a range of behaviorally informed measures that can raise awareness and encourage more sustainable water-use decisions.
Context-Specific interventions
The diversity of Latin America and the Caribbean will of course, require interventions that are tailored to specific conditions. The monograph describes context-sensitive interventions that combine behavioural insights with traditional regulatory and policy strategies, offering tools that can help preserve our water resources and contribute to a more sustainable future.
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