4.8 Article

Still in love with solar energy? Installation size, affect, and the social acceptance of renewable energy technologies

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2021.111107

Keywords

Photovoltaics; Solar energy; Social acceptance; Affect; Emotions

Funding

  1. University of St.Gallen [2220380]
  2. Raiffeisen Switzerland
  3. Swiss Energy
  4. Swiss Competence Centers for Energy Research (SCCER CREST) - Innosuisse

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Solar and wind energy are expected to be crucial in achieving climate neutrality in Europe by 2050. While solar energy enjoys high levels of social and political acceptance, this decreases when compared to wind energy based on installation sizes. Emotions play an important role in shaping public attitudes towards large-scale wind and solar installations, emphasizing the need for policymakers and developers to consider these affective aspects in decision-making.
Solar and wind energy are expected to play a key role in creating a climate-neutral Europe by 2050 and decarbonizing energy production in general, albeit requiring significant deployment. This presupposes that the population accepts such energy sources, thus necessitates understanding how people perceive energy systems. Unlike the abundant literature about wind energy, social acceptance of solar energy has received less attention, especially concerning large solar installations. Opinion polls indicate that solar energy enjoys a high level of socio-political acceptance and is preferred to other renewables, although it is unclear whether this acceptance persists as the technology is deployed on a large scale. This paper helps close this gap by describing the results of a representative survey (n = 601) conducted using a between-subject design to examine how attitudes of the public towards solar energy vary based on the size of installations, how the latter compare to attitudes towards wind energy, and what the role of affect is in the former. Results reveal that the stronger preference for solar power decreases to a similar level as that for wind energy when comparing installation of similar sizes, high-lighting that solar energy installations may not easily be scaled up. The study also shows that affect plays an important role in forming people's attitudes towards wind and solar, especially concerning large-scale in-stallations. This underlines the need for policymakers and project developers, who aim to deploy renewables on a large scale, to attend to the affective component of decision-making.

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