1. Introduction
Tourism is a vital constituent force of the global economy. As of 2018, it contributed over USD 8.8 trillion, representing 10.4% of the worldwide gross domestic product (GDP), according to the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO, 2018) [
1], and accounted for one in ten jobs, according to the World Tourism Council (WTTC, 2019). Despite its positive contribution to economic growth, many studies have shown that tourism is also a primary contributor to global climate change [
2,
3]. The United Nations Environment Programmer (UNWTO) and the World Meteorological Organization (2008), for instance, estimate that direct carbon emissions from tourism account for 5% of total global carbon emissions, increasing to close to a 14% share, when other factors are considered. Recent studies, meanwhile, suggest that tourism’s global carbon footprint accounts for about 8% of global GHG emissions [
4]. In recent years, although Chinese tourism, as a strategic pillar industry, has boosted domestic tourism revenue, it has also generated high carbon emissions, with China’s total carbon emissions from tourism accounting for 2.7% of the country’s total [
5].
The notion of carbon emission reduction has gained immense significance in recent years, with the gradual transition to a low-carbon tourism industry having thus become a key area of interest to the academic community. In this respect, many scholars have summarized the key variables affecting tourism-related carbon emissions, most notably energy consumption, technological development, and domestic and international visitors [
6,
7]. Although tourism is marked by high emissions, it includes a wide range of applications for promoting clean energy development, promoting energy renewability, and reducing energy consumption [
1]. Modifications in its production model play an important role in promoting a global shift towards sustainability. From an industry perspective, factors such as economic scale, technological advances, environmental regulation, energy mix, and prices are all directions for addressing the sustainability of tourism. However, the consumption behavior of domestic and international visitors is an essential aspect; the products or services provided by the tourism industry must meet the needs of tourists, and tourists are the core of the tourism industry [
8]. Therefore, the solution to the carbon emission problem of the tourism industry depends not only on the policy measures of international organizations and governments, but also on the active participation of consumers. Therefore, the low-carbon behavior of tourists can directly reduce carbon emissions and resource consumption, promoting the high-quality development of low-carbon tourism [
9].
Clearly, the consumption behavior of tourists occurs in a different context from that of ordinary consumers in the so called “unusual” environment of tourism. This unusual environment comprises all environments other than the one in which people normally live, work, study, socialize, etc. Based on experience, Chen (2017) classifies the usual environment into a broad experience and a special experience [
10], and the essence of tourism is a special experience in an unusual environment. It is in this change from the usual to the unusual environment that tourism activities achieve a geospatial displacement and a change in the psychological dimension. Consequently, the high-carbon consumption behaviors that tourists may develop are shaped by several influencing factors that include changes in the tourist’s attitude [
11], cognition [
12], hedonic appeals [
13], binding [
14,
15], environmental tensions [
16], and uncertainty in the outcomes of this behavior [
17] in an unusual environment.
Tourists are important players in the tourism industry, prompting significant changes and sustainable development; hence, further exploration and clarification of their low-carbon behavioral intentions is a key topic requiring urgent attention. Many factors influence the consumption behavior of tourists and their behavioral intentions to consume. Although perceived value, as a critical antecedent variable, plays an essential role in explaining individual behavior [
18], the previous literature seems to maintain a stronger focus on the various factors that influence consumer behavior due to the perceived value of the tourist. These factors include such things as satisfaction [
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25] and intention to revisit (loyalty) [
8,
9,
14,
26], as well as various dimensions of the perceived value itself [
27,
28], which was showed to have a positive effect on consumer behavior and intentions regarding consumption behavior.
The present study is founded on the notion that a sense of social responsibility consists of individuals or groups undertaking and fulfilling the corresponding responsibilities and obligations for society’s benefit, under certain social conditions [
29]. Many scholars have established the current situation regarding a sense of social responsibility, along with its influencing factors [
19,
30,
31,
32,
33,
34,
35,
36,
37], and conducted pathway studies on the cultivation of a sense of social responsibility [
33,
38,
39]. While foreign studies tend to focus more on the impact of corporate social responsibility on the industry [
25,
39,
40,
41,
42,
43,
44,
45], there are many interpretations of a sense of social responsibility in particular contexts [
46], such as during the COVID-19 epidemic [
47,
48,
49], or the embodiment of a sense of social responsibility in the retail industry [
50], etc., Although theorists focus on revealing low-carbon consumption behavior, which is more of an antecedent variable [
51,
52,
53,
54,
55,
56], they concentrate mainly on its relationship with low-carbon consumption behavioral intentions, using a theory of planned behavior [
57,
58,
59] approach, and on the willingness to pay for low-carbon product premiums [
60,
61].
Given that academic research on the driving mechanism of the low-carbon consumption behavior intention of tourists is insufficient, little attention has been focused on linking perceived values, sense of social responsibility, and low-carbon consumption behavioral intentions and studying their influencing pathways. As a result, practical implications for reducing carbon emissions from tourism are limited, and with energy consumption and carbon emission control at the core of the consumption chain, low-carbon consumption is bound to become an important part of implementing China’s “carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals” [
62].
The objective of this study, therefore, is to explore the psychological drivers of tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intentions. Our analysis addressed the perspective of perceived worth and social responsibility awareness, drawing on various literary streams, and focusing on their relationship and the influence of low-carbon consumption behavior intention. The analysis also expands the research on low-carbon consumption behavior, currently concentrated on usual environmental consumption, to the unusual tourism environment in order to enrich the research content and scope of low-carbon consumption behavior. We hypothesized that the perceived value of tourists has a positive effect on the sense of social responsibility, consumption attitude, and low-carbon consumption behavior intentions in an unusual environment. Thus, there is both a positive and significant effect of tourists’ sense of social responsibility on tourists’ consumption attitude, as there is also a similar effect on tourists’ consumption attitudes towards low-carbon consumption behavior intentions, with a sense of social responsibility and consumption attitude playing an important intermediary role. We will take tourists as a particular research object and analyze the specific factors that affect consumer behavior intention when they move from a usual environment to an unusual one. Based on the results of this analysis, we propose specific measures to promote sustainable tourism development and achieve the “carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals.”
5. Discussion
Low carbon consumption is a better way to consume if climate goals are to be achieved. This study attempts to reveal tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention and its path of influence. To this end, the study constructs a model of tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention. Specifically, it supports us in identifying the relevant factors (e.g., perceived value, sense of social responsibility, and consumption attitude) regarding low-carbon consumption behavior intention in the tourism process. This study contributes to developing tourism management literature related to low-carbon consumption behavior, with the findings supporting the research hypothesis, implying that tourists’ perceived value and sense of social responsibility constitute the drivers of tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intentions. These findings also support those of Lee et al. (2007), Yu et al. (2019), and Wu et al. (2018) [
78,
94,
95]. Specifically, these findings support the study by Yu et al. (2019), which determined that value positively influences consumers’ behavior intentions [
78]. This finding is also reflected in tourism consumption, supporting Lee et al.’s (2007) study [
94]. This paper finds that the more socially responsible tourists are, the more likely they are to develop low-carbon consumption behavior intention, supporting the study by Wu et al. (2018), which suggests that moral identity has an enhancing effect on tourists’ moral behavior intentions [
95]. However, this study extends beyond the existing research by correlating a perceived value with a sense of social responsibility and discussing their linkage. Subsequently, several practical implications for increasing the intention of low carbon consumption behavior of tourists were suggested, especially regarding China’s “carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals.
According to the results of the data analysis, environmental protection, energy conservation, animal protection, and supervision and maintenance of rights are relevant and can reflect the sense of social responsibility. Emotional value, functional value, social value, and ecological value are relevant and can reflect perceived value. The more positive the tourists’ perceived values, the higher their sense of social responsibility. This is expressed by the fact that the more positive the emotional and ecological values, the higher the environmental protection, energy conservation, animal protection, and supervision and maintenance of rights; the more positive the functional values, the higher the supervision and maintenance of rights; and the more positive the social values, the higher the environmental protection and animal protection. The more positive the tourists’ perceived values, the higher their consumption attitude and their low-carbon consumption behavior intention, mainly in the emotional value and ecological value dimensions. The more positive the tourists’ sense of social responsibility, the higher the attitude towards consumption, expressed in the energy conservation and animal protection dimensions. The more positive the tourists’ consumption attitude, the higher their low-carbon consumption behavior intention will be. The complex pathways between the four areas form a model of the low-carbon consumption behavior intention, demonstrating the relevant factors that influence the tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention.
According to the descriptive results, tourists are aware of the impact of their behavior on climate and, more importantly, take responsibility for unsustainable tourism consumption behavior and have a moral responsibility to travel green. In addition, this result is in line with Sun and Yang (2020) in that the functional aspect [
96], which involves the emotional value, social value, and ecological value, was an important determinant for tourists’ perceived value, showing that tourists will be more likely to develop an attitude of consumption, in some cases. For example, tourists experience the pleasures of low-carbon tourism; for example, they share the utility of building connections with other social groups (for example, making a good impression or creating a positive and healthy image, etc.), and they experience the emotional satisfaction of low-carbon tourism (not only because of the recognition of others, but also because they pursue environmental and ecological values). The study found a significant negative correlation between the function, utility, quality, cost, and consumption attitude obtained after tourism consumption, which may be because, in the usual environment, consumers’ interest concerns are primarily expressed in monetary terms. The previous studies showed that blind consumption, impulsive consumption, herd consumption, and other high carbon consumption behavior for tourists could be produced easily while they were in the exceptional, unusual environment of tourism [
5,
6,
95,
96]. Generally, the consumers’ interests are mainly concerned with non-functional values in the tourism context.
The sense of social responsibility positively and significantly impacts tourists’ consumption attitudes, which demonstrates that this hypothesis provides strong empirical evidence consistent with Axsen’s (2012) findings [
97]. Previous literature found that network communication, information dissemination by social groups, compliance with other people’s behavior, organizational communication will affect consumers’ perception of low-carbon consumption. When consumers transform themselves into low-carbon consumers, they are implicitly affected by the joint action of various modes of communication; the tourist’s sense of social responsibility to conserve energy and protect animals directly and positively influences consumption attitudes. This indicates that the more energy-conscious and animal-conscious tourists are, the more positive low-carbon consumption attitudes they have, supporting previous study findings by different scholars. Previous studies have identified a strong relationship between social and environmental awareness and sustainable consumption behavior [
98,
99]. At the same time, the study found a significant adverse association between environmental protection and supervision and the protection of rights, which is supported by the outcomes of the studies by Severo (2021) [
100]. The more negligible effect of residents’ environmental awareness on social responsibility was observed in his study. Certainly, environmental awareness of tourists should be further strengthened. Environmentally unfriendly practices, such as littering and the use of disposable items causing white pollution, still exist in tourist attractions. Meanwhile, without damaging the core interests of tourists, the awareness of monitoring and defending rights is still relatively weak for tourists, and it is difficult to influence them to establish a consumption attitude.
We show that perceived value has a positive and significant effect on the sense of social responsibility, with the emotional value of perceived value having the most significant impact on energy conservation; this dimension elucidates that tourists are more motivated to conserve when they feel the pleasure of low carbon tourism. Then, the tourist’ perception of the function, value, quality, and cost of a product during consumption affects the awareness of the monitoring and maintaining of rights. At the same time, the utility of association with other social groups after low-carbon tourism directly influences the awareness of monitoring and advocacy—a finding consistent with previous studies that have identified a close relationship between perceived value and sense of social responsibility in monitoring advocacy. Finally, the ecological value of the tourists’ perceived value is positively related to the sense of social responsibility: the more tourists pursue specific ecological and environmental values, the more socially responsible they are. Previous findings further support this result, where Chueh (2020) [
101], for example, suggests that consumers are more likely to consciously act to improve the environment when they are critically aware and concerned about protecting it. Overall, these results support Sharmin et al.’s (2020) [
102] suggestion that millennials’ environmental values influence their awareness of environmental sustainability, and that the higher the environmental awareness, the higher the concern for green products; the impact of consumption patterns on the environment is also of concern to more nature-loving tourists. Therefore, the previous studies supported that the perceived value could influence the sense of social responsibility of tourists.
Finally, we point out that perceived value and tourist consumption attitudes positively and significantly affect tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention. It is argued that the perceived value of tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention through the mediating variable “consumption attitude”, and the emotional value and ecological value of “perceived value”, can also directly influence low-carbon consumption behavior intention, which is supported by the outcomes of the studies by Wang et al. (2016). Attitude is the primary consideration in predicting behavioral intention [
103], and consumption attitudes directly and positively influence low-carbon consumption behavior; generally, when individuals are willing to implement a behavior, they are more likely to follow through with it. That is, tourists tend to be more inclined to low-carbon consumption behavior when they have consumption attitudes, validating the arguments of Aral and Sintas (2020) [
104] and Peng et al. (2016) [
105]. Liu et al. (2019) also concluded that attitudes indirectly affect low-carbon consumption behavior through low-carbon behavioral intentions [
53], representing a typical positive behavior in the domain of tourism and tourism consumer behavior.
In China, carbon emission targets have recently been clarified, although these targets are limited to the overall macro level and sustainable use for power generation issues. However, carbon emissions from tourism have not been given sufficient attention, since the strategy system does not reveal the climate impact of tourism, or how to achieve carbon emission reductions from tourism. These issues should be discussed in detail, and the intention of the low carbon consumption behavior of tourists should be taken into account.
The findings of this study provide empirical support for a deep understanding of the complex path of perceived value → social responsibility awareness → consumption attitude → low-carbon consumption behavior intention. Considering the multidimensional nature of perceived value and the sense of social responsibility, the findings of this study are more detailed in comparison. The study clarifies the relative roles of the sub-dimensions in theory and indicates the direction for exerting efforts to enhance tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention in practice. More pertinently, it suggests the importance of the theoretical and practical significance of studying tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior intention from a multidimensional perspective [
21].
6. Conclusions, Recommendations, and Study Limitations
6.1. Conclusions
Taking Zhangjiajie National Forest Park as an example, a research model including perceived value, social responsibility awareness, consumption attitude, and low-carbon consumption behavior intention was constructed. The overall model shows a significant positive influence of perceived value on social responsibility awareness, consumption attitude, and low-carbon consumption behavior intention. Although perceived value has a widespread occurrence in the research on low-carbon consumption behavior in previous decades, fewer studies exist regarding its impact on socially responsible awareness of the low-carbon consumption behavior intention.
According to the results, the following conclusions can be drawn: (1) The emotional value, social value, and ecological value perceived by tourists during the travel process will positively impact tourists’ consumption attitudes; the more tourists feel the emotional satisfaction brought by low-carbon tourism during the trip, the more they will establish the attitude of low-carbon consumption. The ecological value has the most significant direct influence on the consumption attitude of tourists. (2) Functional value, i.e., the function, utility, quality, and cost that tourists obtain after low-carbon tourism, has little impact on establishing consumption attitudes of tourists. (3) The more substantial the tourist’s sense of social responsibility to save energy and protect animals, the greater the impact on building consumption attitudes. The greater the tourists’ low carbon consumption attitudes, the more likely they are to be inclined to low carbon consumption behavior. Tourists are more likely to be inclined to low-carbon consumption behavior when they feel the ecological and emotional value of such behavior. (4) The utility of association with other social groups after low-carbon tourism directly influences the awareness of monitoring and defending their rights.
In summary, the findings of this paper provide a more comprehensive picture of the psychological states and behavioral intentions generated by tourists in unusual environments and explain the mechanisms at play in developing low-carbon consumption behavioral intentions. The complex pathway of perceived value → low-carbon consumption behavioral intention and its influencing mechanisms are explored.
6.2. Suggestions
The above findings provide essential insights into guiding tourists to effectively generate low-carbon consumption behavior. In particular, the following paths can be pursued:
(1) Tourists’ awareness of environmental protection or the popularization of environmental knowledge will affect the sense of social responsibility of tourists, which will further indirectly affect the intention of low-carbon consumption behavior of tourists. The study showed that including environmental issues in education and training courses effectively cultivated students’ awareness of environmental protection. Tourism destinations can organically integrate environmental knowledge with tourism experiences to promote tourists’ initiatives to adopt low-carbon consumption behaviors.
(2) Tourists in the low-carbon tourism environment bring the experience of emotional satisfaction, which would generate more consumption attitude, and affect their low-carbon consumption behavior intention. Tourists should be guided to personally experience low-carbon consumption behavior in tourism, getting close to nature through low-carbon consumption, and enhancing their feelings about pursuing environmental and ecological values.
(3) Cultivating tourists’ awareness of energy conservation and animal protection will directly influence their attitudes toward low-carbon consumption, demonstrating the close relationship between social responsibility awareness and low-carbon consumption behavioral intentions. Given this, various methods can inspire tourists’ moral responsibility to practice low-carbon consumption behavior. Meanwhile, information dissemination by social groups, conformity to others’ behavior, and organizational communication could also influence tourists’ perceptions of low-carbon consumption. Tourists with a strong sense of social responsibility will adapt their norms to those in the public environment, generating higher moral behavioral intentions, targeting reminders of environmental responsibility, and prompting more conscious adaptation of their behavioral standards.
(4) Changes in the consumption attitudes of tourists will directly and indirectly affect the intention of the low-carbon consumption behavior of tourists. When tourists have a positive attitude toward consumption, they tend to be more inclined toward low-carbon consumption behavior, thus a fundamental change should be made in the tourists’ psychology of enjoyment, gradually developing a sustainable consumption attitude. This could be achieved, for example, by encouraging visitors to focus on non-material concerns instead of material ones, pay attention to resources and environmental issues, control their conduct, adopt a low-carbon travel mindset, and eventually develop the intention to engage in low-carbon consumption.
In summary, destination managers, enterprises, or communities do not need to limit themselves to improving only a single element to enhance tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior. Moreover, according to their specific situations, they can choose different paths to efficiently promote tourists’ low-carbon consumption behavior.
6.3. Research Limitations
This study examines the low-carbon consumption behavior intention of tourists when traveling from the unique context of tourism. Due to the authors’ academic levels, research funding, and time and energy limitations, several current limitations offer avenues for future research, mainly including the following:
(1) Since the domestic research on low carbon consumption behavior mainly exists at the macro level, the scales in this study are all from foreign-related literature, leading to two problems. Firstly, the translation is not accurate enough, and some questionable items still have unclear semantics; secondly, there is the problem of the cultural differences between China and foreign countries. This paper tries to select the more mature international scale of perceived value and social responsibility awareness, although the research scales of foreign scholars are not fully adaptable to Chinese tourists. Despite this, the data in the questionnaire passed the reliability and validity tests and exploratory factor analysis, though there is still room for improvement.
(2) The data samples in this study were collected from limited sources from Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, which, as China’s first national forest park, has a scenic area that is both influential and accessible, attracting tourists from all over the country every year. However, the influence of Zhangjiajie’s treacherous terrain determines that there are fewer elderly tourists over 60 years old, with primarily young and middle-aged tourists being more typical.
(3) The sample size of this study is limited and unevenly distributed in terms of occupation, education level, economic ability, age, etc., and future research could address this issue by increasing the number of samples and case sites. Thus this study’s potential applicability range could be expanded.