Authors
Summary
While intentions are likely to play an important role in household solar-panel adoption, most research usually considers intentions and actual adoption separately, creating uncertainty for equitable policy design. Using the UK Household Longitudinal Study, we examine the link between stated intentions and actual adoption. We implement a multinomial logit framework and combine this with matching methods to compare observationally similar households across intention categories. We find that 90% of households who had seriously considered adopting solar panels by 2012–13 had not adopted by 2021–22. Interestingly, households who initially rejected solar-panel adoption after consideration by 2012–13 were more likely adopters by 2021–22, compared to those who had not considered adoption at all. Despite these nuances, solar intentions (proxied by serious consideration) exert a robust positive effect on actual adoption, increasing the likelihood by three to seven percentage points – larger than commonly assessed variables such as income or climate perceptions, which each contribute zero to two percentage points. Moreover, the influence of solar intentions is largely consistent across income groups. Decomposition analysis further reveals that modest income effects are largely attributable to correlated factors such as renting status and age. These findings suggest that policy design uncertainty can be reduced by carefully eliciting household intentions, particularly among younger households, rather than relying solely on income-based eligibility thresholds for targeting energy policies.
Volume
Volume: 158:109335
Subjects
Notes
Open Access
Under a Creative Commons license