"Womp Womp! Your browser does not support canvas :'("

Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Solar Markets: Survey Data

Publicly accessible License 

This research focused on accelerating solar photovoltaic (PV) diffusion by collecting new market data and developing predictive modeling frameworks to test and refine understandings of household level motivations for adopting solar.

Three different household-level surveys were fielded: one for households who had installed PV on their current home or had signed a contract to do so (the Adopter survey), one for households that had seriously considered PV but had not installed it (the Considerer survey), and one for the general population who did not have PV on their current home (the general population survey or GPS). Survey respondents were from four U.S. states: New Jersey, New York, Arizona, and California. Details of recruiting and sampling are documented below.

Research projects on residential PV adoption often collect data only from PV adopters or from the general population. One of the innovations of this project was the three-pronged household survey data collection. By collecting similar data from three fairly different "statuses" with respect to adoption, the surveys provide a basis for understanding how those who do not have rooftop PV differ from those who have, for how and why people do (or don't) transition from not having to having rooftop PV on their home, and for understanding the characteristics and viewpoints of households who have scarcely, or not at all, entered the "PV consideration" track. All three surveys covered single-family owner-occupied households in each of the four target states used in the project -- Arizona, California, New Jersey, and New York - allowing a comparative approach to understanding how the factors that affect PV adoption vary by geography and policy conditions.

The General Population and Considerer surveys provide a basis for understanding opinions about and interest in solar, and how these relate to household demographics and other conditions. Paired with the Adopter survey, they also provide data for understanding how those who do not have rooftop PV differ from those who have, and for how and why people do (or don't) transition from not having to having rooftop PV on their home. The Adopter survey questions were designed to capture a broad range of information on what motivates and impedes households to install rooftop PV, as well as the details and timing of the decision and installation. Survey instrument development drew from existing PV adoption survey instruments, PV adoption literature, and research team experience, as well as from past work on household interest in energy efficiency, environmental attitudes, purchasing tendencies, and related knowledge. Early interviews and discussions with installers and others in the PV industry were also taken into consideration.

Citation Formats

National Renewable Energy Laboratory. (2017). Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Solar Markets: Survey Data [data set]. Retrieved from 2b90b4d8-b7cb-4440-b03d-75344cd6908f.
Export Citation to RIS
Sigrin, , Dietz, , Henry, , Ingle, , Lutzenhiser, , Moezzi, , Spielman, , Stern, , Todd, , Tong, , and Wolske, . Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Solar Markets: Survey Data. United States: N.p., 22 May, 2017. Web. 2b90b4d8-b7cb-4440-b03d-75344cd6908f.
Sigrin, , Dietz, , Henry, , Ingle, , Lutzenhiser, , Moezzi, , Spielman, , Stern, , Todd, , Tong, , & Wolske, . Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Solar Markets: Survey Data. United States. 2b90b4d8-b7cb-4440-b03d-75344cd6908f
Sigrin, , Dietz, , Henry, , Ingle, , Lutzenhiser, , Moezzi, , Spielman, , Stern, , Todd, , Tong, , and Wolske, . 2017. "Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Solar Markets: Survey Data". United States. 2b90b4d8-b7cb-4440-b03d-75344cd6908f.
@div{oedi_6305, title = {Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Solar Markets: Survey Data}, author = {Sigrin, , Dietz, , Henry, , Ingle, , Lutzenhiser, , Moezzi, , Spielman, , Stern, , Todd, , Tong, , and Wolske, .}, abstractNote = {This research focused on accelerating solar photovoltaic (PV) diffusion by collecting new market data and developing predictive modeling frameworks to test and refine understandings of household level motivations for adopting solar.

Three different household-level surveys were fielded: one for households who had installed PV on their current home or had signed a contract to do so (the Adopter survey), one for households that had seriously considered PV but had not installed it (the Considerer survey), and one for the general population who did not have PV on their current home (the general population survey or GPS). Survey respondents were from four U.S. states: New Jersey, New York, Arizona, and California. Details of recruiting and sampling are documented below.

Research projects on residential PV adoption often collect data only from PV adopters or from the general population. One of the innovations of this project was the three-pronged household survey data collection. By collecting similar data from three fairly different "statuses" with respect to adoption, the surveys provide a basis for understanding how those who do not have rooftop PV differ from those who have, for how and why people do (or don't) transition from not having to having rooftop PV on their home, and for understanding the characteristics and viewpoints of households who have scarcely, or not at all, entered the "PV consideration" track. All three surveys covered single-family owner-occupied households in each of the four target states used in the project -- Arizona, California, New Jersey, and New York - allowing a comparative approach to understanding how the factors that affect PV adoption vary by geography and policy conditions.

The General Population and Considerer surveys provide a basis for understanding opinions about and interest in solar, and how these relate to household demographics and other conditions. Paired with the Adopter survey, they also provide data for understanding how those who do not have rooftop PV differ from those who have, and for how and why people do (or don't) transition from not having to having rooftop PV on their home. The Adopter survey questions were designed to capture a broad range of information on what motivates and impedes households to install rooftop PV, as well as the details and timing of the decision and installation. Survey instrument development drew from existing PV adoption survey instruments, PV adoption literature, and research team experience, as well as from past work on household interest in energy efficiency, environmental attitudes, purchasing tendencies, and related knowledge. Early interviews and discussions with installers and others in the PV industry were also taken into consideration. }, doi = {}, url = {2b90b4d8-b7cb-4440-b03d-75344cd6908f}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2017}, month = {05}}

Details

Data from May 22, 2017

Last updated Dec 18, 2024

Submitted May 22, 2017

Organization

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Contact

Ben Sigrin

Authors

Sigrin

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Dietz

Social and Environmental Research Institute

Henry

University of Arizona

Ingle

Portland State University

Lutzenhiser

Portland State University

Moezzi

Portland State University

Spielman

University of Colorado - Boulder

Stern

Social and Environmental Research Institute

Todd

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Tong

Clean Power Finance

Wolske

University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

DOE Project Details

Project Name Understanding the Evolution of Customer Motivations and Adoption Barriers in Residential Photovoltaics Markets

Project Number EE0026154

Share

Submission Downloads