4.7 Article

Effects of perceived stress on public acceptance of waste incineration projects: evidence from three cities in China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 34952-34965

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-24701-2

Keywords

Waste-to-energy incinerator projects; Public acceptance; Perceived stress; Public perceptions; China

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Public acceptance plays a crucial role in the provision of potentially hazardous facilities, and factors such as perceived risk, benefit, stress, fairness, and public trust can influence it. This study examined the underlying mechanism of perceived stress on public acceptance of waste-to-energy incinerators through a face-to-face questionnaire survey of 1066 urban residents in three regional central cities in China. The results show that perceived stress affects acceptance by influencing perceived risk, fairness, and public trust. Additionally, the influence of individual perceptions on acceptance varies between cities with different economic, cultural, and social characteristics.
Public acceptance is important for the provision of potentially hazardous facilities and may be affected by many factors such as perceived risk/benefit/stress/fairness and public trust. In this study, the underlying mechanism behind the influence of perceived stress on public acceptance of waste-to-energy (WTE) incinerators was explored by structural equation modeling of a face-to-face questionnaire survey of 1066 urban residents in three regional central cities in China. The results indicate that, firstly, the perceived stress of the laypeople has an impact on their acceptance by influencing risk/fairness they perceived and public trust. Secondly, the paths of influence of individual perceptions on acceptance differ between cities with different economic, cultural, and social characteristics. Perceived stress mainly affects public acceptance through perceived risk in the eastern residents while perceived stress mainly affects public acceptance through public trust in the western residents. The findings clarify the theoretical role of perceived stress in shaping laypeople's acceptance of potentially hazardous facilities which are of value for both governments and owners in siting potentially hazardous facilities.

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