4.7 Article

Attitudes, preferences, and intentions of German households concerning participation in peer-to-peer electricity trading

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 138, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2020.111238

Keywords

Peer-to-peer electricity trading; Prosumer; Attitudes; Preferences; Purchase intentions; Energy community

Funding

  1. Sudwestdeutsche Stromhandels GmbH
  2. Energieversorgung Filstal GmbH Co. KG
  3. EWS Elektrizitatswerke Schonau eG
  4. Stadtwerke Bretten GmbH
  5. Stadtwerke Bruchsal GmbH
  6. Stadtwerke Landsberg KU
  7. Stadtwerke Rottenburg am Neckar GmbH
  8. Stadtwerke Waldshut-Tiengen GmbH

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Based on a survey among customers of seven German municipal utilities, we estimate two regression models to identify the most prospective customer segments and their preferences and motivations for participating in peerto-peer (P2P) electricity trading and develop implications for decision-makers in the energy sector and policy-makers for this currently relatively unknown product. Our results show a large general openness of private households towards P2P electricity trading, which is also the main predictor of respondents' intention to participate. It is mainly influenced by individuals' environmental attitude, technical interest, and independence aspiration. Respondents with the highest willingness to participate in P2P electricity trading are mainly motivated by the ability to share electricity, and to a lesser extent by economic reasons. They also have stronger preferences for innovative pricing schemes (service bundles, time-of-use tariffs). Differences between individuals can be observed depending on their current ownership (prosumers) or installation probability of a microgeneration unit (consumers, planners). Rather than current prosumers, especially planners willing to install microgeneration in the foreseeable future are considered to be the most promising target group for P2P electricity trading. Finally, our results indicate that P2P electricity trading could be a promising niche option in the German energy transition.

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