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Understanding Water Consumption in Qatar: Evidence From a Nationally Representative Survey

Alanoud Al‐Maadid, Jesper Akesson, David Bernstein, Jayani Chakravarti, Ahmed Khalifa

2022Urban Water Journal11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper presents an analysis of a nationally representative (n = 1,002) telephone survey conducted in Qatar on habits, perceptions, and religious attitudes related to water use. Our empirical analysis yields three main findings. When asked whether religious obligation was a reason to save water, 89% of respondents agreed with the statement, showing it to be an important stated motive for water conservation. However, we find no statistically significant relationship between stated attitudes towards water use and actual water consumption. Second, when asked to estimate their monthly water use, participants’ actual water consumption was similar to how they perceived it to be, on average, but different at the decile level. Third, certain household water usage characteristics are associated with significantly higher levels of water consumption. These include: nationality, education, number of adults in the residence, among others.

Topics & Concepts

ResidenceConsumption (sociology)Water consumptionDecileTelephone surveyNationalityObligationWater usePsychologySocioeconomicsGeographyDemographic economicsBusinessEconomicsMarketingWater resource managementEnvironmental scienceSociologyStatisticsMathematicsPolitical scienceSocial scienceLawEcologyBiologyArchaeologyImmigrationEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityWater resources management and optimizationEconomic and Environmental Valuation
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