Abstract
The paper aims at valuing consumers' willingness to pay for environmental attributes of a cut flower using choice experiment and hence identifying the presence of a hypothetical market for environmental friendly flowers. Considering the local and global environmental impacts of floriculture, two environmental attributes of a cut flower namely, Eco-labeling (EHPEA-CP label) and Carbone footprint together with a price attribute were selected for choice experiment. Survey data from 200 randomly selected consumers were employed and two multinomial logit models and a random parameter logit model were used for estimations. The estimated results from all models reveled that respondents had the willingness to pay for both environmental attributes of a cut flower and they were willing to pay 1.98 birr and 10 birr for eco-label and carbon footprint attributes of a cut flower respectively, valuing carbon footprint more than eco-labeling. Based on the welfare estimates, consumers were willing to pay 10.47 birr for a bronze labeled and carbon neutral cut flower; 12.45 birr for a flower with silver brand and medium (neutral) carbon footprint and 24.43 birr for brand gold and carbon saving (low) flower. Thus, environmental friendly flowers mayfind a niche market in Ethiopia.