4.7 Article

Regional disparity of residential solar panel diffusion in Australia: The roles of socio-economic factors

Journal

RENEWABLE ENERGY
Volume 206, Issue -, Pages 808-819

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.renene.2023.02.111

Keywords

Solar; Australia; Socio-economic; Solar policy; Renewable energy; Energy transition

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This study investigates the effects of socio-economic variables on solar energy uptake in Australia. The results show that different socio-economic factors impact solar adoption in different regions. This has implications for future policies and business models.
In following a pathway towards decarbonisation of energy systems, Australia has successfully accelerated the adoption of solar technologies, with approximately three million small-scale distributed solar panels installed on rooftops of Australian homes. This study, in seeking to explore the effects of socio-economic variables on solar energy uptake, firstly explored the historical diffusions of household solar panels across 2668 Australian post - code areas, and classified the postal areas into three groups through K-means clustering according to their solar penetration status, namely the regions with low, medium, and high solar-level. Subsequently, this study carried out a hierarchical regression analysis investigating the significant socio-economic factors impacting solar adoption in each of the three region types. The results indicate that the three solar groups have different sig- nificant impacting factors. In addition, factors, such as detached house and multi-person household, positively contribute to the solar panel uptake, while factors like population density and middle-aged people provide negative contributes. The findings suggest new directions that could be taken for future policies and viable business models, and that specific measures for the varied socio-economic factors to be considered at different stages of solar energy development.

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