According to a joint Yale and New York
University study,
homeowners are more likely to install solar panels on their homes if one of
their neighbors have them. The study, titled “Peer Effects in the Diffusion of Solar
Photovoltaic Panels”, examined solar installation patterns in California between
January 2001 and December 2011.
The
researchers found that a resident living in a particular zip code was more
likely to install solar panels on his/her roof if their neighbors had already installed
solar panels. To put it in numbers, for every 10 additional solar panel
installations in a zip code, the probability of solar panel adoption for a
household increases by 7.8 percent.
There
were two other factors that confounded the increase in solar panel adoption: 1)
how visible solar panels were, and 2) word-of-mouth among the area residents. It
seems that people were too nervous to embark on installations alone, but when
they saw that their friends and neighbors had done it, they felt more
comfortable and went on to install solar panels on their own rooftops.
The
researchers hope that information from this study will help policy makers and
marketers develop appropriate subsidies for solar power and improve the diffusion
process. Solar companies in San Diego will surely benefit from the study’s findings,
as they have implications for community involvement. Another benefit from these
findings; knowing that installing solar panels within a certain zip code can
lead to more referrals and solar projects, especially since word-of-mouth is
such an important contributing factor.
Have you
installed solar panels after seeing your neighbor do so? Are you inspiring
others to go solar? Let us know!
If you’re
interested in more information regarding solar panel installation
in California, please contact Solaire Energy Systems.
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