The search for a more sustainable consumption is reaching a critical moment.
When sustainable alternatives are widespread, affordable and 
just as good or better than the legacy option, then eco-consumption 
becomes less about the status of opting in, and more about the shame
 of opting out. That’s why in 2020, millions of consumers will seek out 
products, services and experiences that help them alleviate rising 
eco-shame.
It’s hard to overstate the significance of this shift. We’ve been 
tracking the search for a more sustainable consumption for over a 
decade. The common thread that runs through much of it? The evolution of
 eco-consumption as a 
status play. 
Just take a look at three iconic eco-consumption moments. Way back in 2008 Tesla launch the 
Roadster, a USD 100,000 electric supercar. Eco-status! In 2016 
Adidas partner with Parley for the Oceans
 to produce a limited-edition line of sneakers made from recycled ocean 
plastic; only 50 pairs are made. Eco-status! Also in 2016, NYC’s 
Momofuku Nishi becomes the 
first restaurant in the world to offer the Impossible Burger. Yet more eco-status!
But what has been the story since then? Fast-forward to 2019, and 
Tesla’s Model 3 is a play for the mainstream driver, and now the 
third best-selling car in the UK. Adidas made 
11 million pairs of ocean plastic sneakers in 2019. And Impossible Burger is available at over 
7,000 Burger King outlets across the US.
From high-end and rare to affordable and widespread: that’s the 
eco-consumption journey across the last few years. And when 
eco-alternatives go mainstream in this way, they're no longer an 
exciting status currency. The key implication? A shift in the moral 
calculus for consumers. Because when eco-alternatives are as available, 
affordable and effective as the legacy option, there's no reason 
not to choose them. Eco-consumption becomes less about the status of opting in, and more about the shame of opting out. 
Throw in Extinction Rebellion, the global Strike for Climate movement, 
and Greta, and you have a tipping point in awareness also fueling this 
crucial shift.  
Increasingly widespread shame at air travel – or 
flygskam in 
the original Swedish – is now set to diffuse across every B2C industry. 
It’s a shift with profound implications for consumerism, business, 
everyone. Implications that you 
must act upon in 2020.