Asked by junior
Energy efficiency strategies are based on the assumption that consumers will be willing to pay more in exchange for reduced energy use.
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True
False
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
False.
Energy-efficiency strategies do not generally assume consumers will pay more; they typically aim to reduce lifetime energy costs (often by higher upfront investment but lower operating costs), rely on regulations, incentives, or cost-neutral improvements, and assume consumers respond to cost savings, comfort, or non‑monetary benefits rather than willingness to pay more.
Energy-efficiency strategies do not generally assume consumers will pay more; they typically aim to reduce lifetime energy costs (often by higher upfront investment but lower operating costs), rely on regulations, incentives, or cost-neutral improvements, and assume consumers respond to cost savings, comfort, or non‑monetary benefits rather than willingness to pay more.
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