Impacts of neighbourhood influence on social acceptance of small solar home systems in rural western Kenya
Authored by Nicholas Nixon Opiyo
Date Published: 2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2019.01.013
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
Knowledge of a new technology is necessary for a consumer to make an
informed decision on its adoption, but this is difficult with nascent
technologies such as solar home systems (SHS) where information is
asymmetrical, with producers being in better positions to test the
technology than consumers, contributing to their initial slow diffusions
in new markets. In such cases, neighbourhood influence from early and
independent adopters play important roles in increased future adoptions.
In this work, impacts of neighbourhood influence and social pressure on
temporal diffusion of SHS in a rural developing community are
investigated. A survey is developed and carried out in Kendu Bay area of
Kenya to gather information on how neighbourhood influence and social
pressure impact on SHS installation decisions. Data from the survey is
then used to inform an agent-based model (ABM) developed in NetLogo, to
simulate impacts of neighbourhood influence radius and threshold, on
temporal diffusion of SHS in a rural developing community. Results show
that visibility of newly installed SHS leads to more installations that
word-of-mouth alone. Results also show that increasing influence radius
leads to exponential growth in SHS installations. For optimal SHS
installations, a neighbourhood threshold of between 12.5\% and 15\% is
required.
Tags
Word-of-mouth
Innovation Diffusion
Visibility
Deployment
Energy technology adoption
Social acceptance
Neighbourhood influence