6533b82afe1ef96bd128ba07

RESEARCH PRODUCT

German Marathon Runners' Opinions on and Willingness to Pay for Environmental Sustainability

Ewa Malchrowicz-mośkoIne HugaertsThomas KöneckeFabio WagnerHolger SchunkTabea Schappel

subject

Geography Planning and DevelopmentEnvironmental StudiesTJ807-830Environmental Sciences & EcologyComputer-assisted web interviewingManagement Monitoring Policy and LawTD194-195Renewable energy sourcesGermanWillingness to payPolitical scienceGermanyrunningGE1-350European commissionGreen & Sustainable Science & TechnologyFrankfurt MarathonMAJOR SPORTING EVENTScience & TechnologyEnvironmental effects of industries and plantsRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industrypro-ecological attitudesWORLD CUPCitizen journalismPublic relationslanguage.human_languageEnvironmental sciencesEuropeSustainabilitylanguageScience & Technology - Other TopicsecologybusinessmarathonLife Sciences & Biomedicineenvironmentwillingness to payEnvironmental Sciences

description

Research on sustainability and/in sport and, specifically, on the ecological aspects of participatory sporting events is still very scarce despite the recognition these topics have received by actors like, for instance, the European Commission and the United Nations. Against this backdrop, this paper sheds light on a field that is virtually uncharted in academic research, which is the environmental attitudes and willingness to pay for environmental sustainability of participants in participatory sporting events in Europe. In collaboration with the organizer of the Frankfurt Marathon, a study was conducted with a specific focus on German (speaking) marathon runners. In total 1764 data sets were collected with a German (1455 respondents) and an English (309 respondents) online questionnaire. Very insightful descriptive analyses showed that the awareness for the issue of sustainability and sport is still low and that ecological initiatives only have a medium influence on the evaluation of a marathon event. Nevertheless, particularly the German-speaking respondents indicated a high willingness to pay for environmental sustainability in general and for specific measures that can enhance the environmental friendliness of a marathon event, in particular. As will be discussed in the paper, these insights have important managerial implications and are a valuable basis for further research in this evolving field.

10.3390/su131810337https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/685715