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Fuelling hydrogen futures? A trust-based model of social acceptance

Gordon, Joel A. LU ; Balta-Ozkan, Nazmiye ; Haq, Anwar Ul and Nabavi, Seyed Ali (2025) In Sustainable Energy and Fuels 9(9). p.2510-2555
Abstract

Public trust plays a fundamental role in shaping national energy policies in democratic countries, as exemplified by nuclear phase-out in Germany following the Fukushima accident. While trust dynamics have been explored in different contexts of the energy transition, few studies have attempted to quantify the influence of public trust in shaping social acceptance and adoption potential. Moreover, the interaction between public trust and perceived community benefits remains underexplored in the literature, despite the relevance of each factor to facilitating social acceptance and technology uptake. In response, this quantitative analysis closes a parallel research gap by examining the antecedents of public trust and perceived community... (More)

Public trust plays a fundamental role in shaping national energy policies in democratic countries, as exemplified by nuclear phase-out in Germany following the Fukushima accident. While trust dynamics have been explored in different contexts of the energy transition, few studies have attempted to quantify the influence of public trust in shaping social acceptance and adoption potential. Moreover, the interaction between public trust and perceived community benefits remains underexplored in the literature, despite the relevance of each factor to facilitating social acceptance and technology uptake. In response, this quantitative analysis closes a parallel research gap by examining the antecedents of public trust and perceived community benefits in the context of deploying hydrogen heating and cooking appliances across parts of the UK housing stock. Drawing on results from a nationally representative online survey (N = 1845), the study advances insights on the consumer perspective of transitioning to ‘hydrogen homes’, which emerged as a topical and controversial aspect of UK energy policy in recent years. Partial least squares structural equation modelling and necessary condition analysis are undertaken to assess the predictive capabilities of a trust-based model, which incorporates aspects of institutional, organisational, interpersonal, epistemic, and social trust. Regarding sufficiency-based logic, social trust is the most influential predictor of public trust, whereas trust in product and service quality corresponds to the most important necessary condition for enabling public trust. Nevertheless, trust in the government, energy sector, and entities involved in research & development are needed to facilitate and strengthen public trust. Overall, this study enriches scholarly understanding of how public trust may shape prospects for trialling novel low-carbon technologies, highlights the need for segment-specific consumer engagement, and advances scholarly understanding of the innovation-decision process in the context of net-zero pathways. As policymakers approach critical decisions on the portfolio of technologies needed to support residential decarbonisation, public trust will prove fundamental to fuelling hydrogen-based energy futures.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Sustainable Energy and Fuels
volume
9
issue
9
pages
46 pages
publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
external identifiers
  • scopus:105004065810
ISSN
2398-4902
DOI
10.1039/d4se01615g
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8c7db49d-74b3-435a-aa4a-34550c4f4da0
date added to LUP
2025-08-13 12:35:41
date last changed
2025-08-13 12:36:31
@article{8c7db49d-74b3-435a-aa4a-34550c4f4da0,
  abstract     = {{<p>Public trust plays a fundamental role in shaping national energy policies in democratic countries, as exemplified by nuclear phase-out in Germany following the Fukushima accident. While trust dynamics have been explored in different contexts of the energy transition, few studies have attempted to quantify the influence of public trust in shaping social acceptance and adoption potential. Moreover, the interaction between public trust and perceived community benefits remains underexplored in the literature, despite the relevance of each factor to facilitating social acceptance and technology uptake. In response, this quantitative analysis closes a parallel research gap by examining the antecedents of public trust and perceived community benefits in the context of deploying hydrogen heating and cooking appliances across parts of the UK housing stock. Drawing on results from a nationally representative online survey (N = 1845), the study advances insights on the consumer perspective of transitioning to ‘hydrogen homes’, which emerged as a topical and controversial aspect of UK energy policy in recent years. Partial least squares structural equation modelling and necessary condition analysis are undertaken to assess the predictive capabilities of a trust-based model, which incorporates aspects of institutional, organisational, interpersonal, epistemic, and social trust. Regarding sufficiency-based logic, social trust is the most influential predictor of public trust, whereas trust in product and service quality corresponds to the most important necessary condition for enabling public trust. Nevertheless, trust in the government, energy sector, and entities involved in research &amp; development are needed to facilitate and strengthen public trust. Overall, this study enriches scholarly understanding of how public trust may shape prospects for trialling novel low-carbon technologies, highlights the need for segment-specific consumer engagement, and advances scholarly understanding of the innovation-decision process in the context of net-zero pathways. As policymakers approach critical decisions on the portfolio of technologies needed to support residential decarbonisation, public trust will prove fundamental to fuelling hydrogen-based energy futures.</p>}},
  author       = {{Gordon, Joel A. and Balta-Ozkan, Nazmiye and Haq, Anwar Ul and Nabavi, Seyed Ali}},
  issn         = {{2398-4902}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  number       = {{9}},
  pages        = {{2510--2555}},
  publisher    = {{Royal Society of Chemistry}},
  series       = {{Sustainable Energy and Fuels}},
  title        = {{Fuelling hydrogen futures? A trust-based model of social acceptance}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4se01615g}},
  doi          = {{10.1039/d4se01615g}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}