The role of peer influence in rooftop solar adoption inequity in the United States

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date Published

11/2023

Authors

DOI

Abstract

Individual demand for emerging technologies can be influenced by the demand of other individuals within defined peer groups. These so-called peer effects(link is external) have been demonstrated in emerging clean energy technologies(link is external) such as rooftop solar. To date, peer effects have disproportionately driven solar adoption among relatively affluent households. Here, we use household-level income estimates of rooftop solar adopters to explore how peer effects drive adoption for low-income households. We find evidence of peer effects for both high- and low-income households and find that peer effects are generally stronger within than across income groups. Our results indicate that peer effects translate to adoption less frequently among low-income households. These results suggest that low-income peer effects are mitigated by barriers to low-income adoption. Heterogeneous peer influence is another demand shifter that explains the inequitable adoption of emerging technologies.

Journal

Energy Economics

Volume

127

Year of Publication

2023

URL

Notes

An open-access version of this article published in Energy Economics can be downloaded here(link is external)

A replication folder with scripts and aggregated, non-proprietary data is available here(link is external)

A brief overview of this study can be found here(link is external)

A webinar recorded on December 13, 2023, can be viewed here(link is external)

Organization

Research Areas