Beef Consumers Behaviour and Preferences—The Case of Portugal


Journal article


Teresa Paiva, Telma A. Jacinto, M. Sarraguça, P. Coutinho
Sustainability, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Paiva, T., Jacinto, T. A., Sarraguça, M., & Coutinho, P. (2022). Beef Consumers Behaviour and Preferences—The Case of Portugal. Sustainability.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Paiva, Teresa, Telma A. Jacinto, M. Sarraguça, and P. Coutinho. “Beef Consumers Behaviour and Preferences—The Case of Portugal.” Sustainability (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Paiva, Teresa, et al. “Beef Consumers Behaviour and Preferences—The Case of Portugal.” Sustainability, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{teresa2022a,
  title = {Beef Consumers Behaviour and Preferences—The Case of Portugal},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Sustainability},
  author = {Paiva, Teresa and Jacinto, Telma A. and Sarraguça, M. and Coutinho, P.}
}

Abstract

Meat consumption is estimated to increase worldwide, mostly because of the increase in population. Further, this increase in meat consumption will ultimately affect the environment and aggravate climate change. Herein, consumers’ behaviour was studied to understand if consumers would consider a change in their dietary habits by choosing beef from the Portuguese autochthonous bovine breed or even reducing their meat intake for environmental reasons. In 2021, a survey was conducted online and in some food sales outlets in Portugal. Therefore, data collected from the 491 participants were analysed with the aim of assessing the Portuguese consumer behaviour and preferences on beef. Firstly, we conducted a descriptive analysis. Then, factor analysis was performed by principal component analysis. Finally, by cluster analysis, we attempted to identify a group of consumers with different behaviours into specific categories. Although it was not possible to segregate consumers into different categories, most of the respondents agree that meat consumption harms the environment; however, just 30.6% are willing to reduce meat consumption due to environmental reasons. As for the concerns for animal welfare, respondents between the age of 23 and 49 years seem to have a greater concern towards animal welfare. To value autochthonous bovine Jarmelista meat, it is fundamental to implement a concerted communication between suppliers and producers to value Jarmelista beef. Furthermore, it is also important that regional governmental institutions support local producers not only for financial support but also to create strategies to protect the breed from extinction.


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