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Heterogeneous preferences for living in a hydrogen home : an advanced multigroup analysis

Gordon, Joel A. LU orcid ; Balta-Ozkan, Nazmiye ; Haq, Anwar Ul and Nabavi, Seyed Ali (2024) In Sustainable Energy and Fuels 8(12). p.2601-2648
Abstract

The UK Hydrogen Strategy (August 2021) and subsequent Heat and Buildings Strategy (October 2021) affirm that a strategic decision is set to be taken by 2026 on the prospect of residential decarbonisation via ‘hydrogen homes’. As this decision date draws nearer, quantitative insights on consumer perceptions of hydrogen-fuelled heating and cooking appliances remain limited. The existing knowledge deficit presents a substantial barrier to implementing a socially acceptable deployment pathway for residential decarbonisation. Despite recent efforts to advance the social science research agenda on hydrogen acceptance, few studies have advanced theoretical knowledge or pursued comprehensive statistical analyses. This study responds to the... (More)

The UK Hydrogen Strategy (August 2021) and subsequent Heat and Buildings Strategy (October 2021) affirm that a strategic decision is set to be taken by 2026 on the prospect of residential decarbonisation via ‘hydrogen homes’. As this decision date draws nearer, quantitative insights on consumer perceptions of hydrogen-fuelled heating and cooking appliances remain limited. The existing knowledge deficit presents a substantial barrier to implementing a socially acceptable deployment pathway for residential decarbonisation. Despite recent efforts to advance the social science research agenda on hydrogen acceptance, few studies have advanced theoretical knowledge or pursued comprehensive statistical analyses. This study responds to the extant research gap by analysing the perceived adoption potential for hydrogen homes via partial least squares-necessary condition-multigroup analysis. Drawing on data from a nationally representative online survey (N = 1845) conducted in the UK, the adoption dynamics for domestic hydrogen are compared across four sub-groups of the population. The findings suggest that non-economic constructs such as safety perceptions and production perceptions are potentially more influential at this stage of the domestic hydrogen transition. Differences between consumer sub-groups are explained by safety, technology, and production perceptions, whereas financial perceptions are relatively homogeneous across the segments. These patterns underline the opportunity to strengthen residential decarbonisation efforts through segment-specific polices and strategic engagement with different parts of the housing stock. Policy makers and key stakeholders should factor consumer heterogeneity into net-zero decision-making processes by firstly acknowledging the amplifying effect of technology and environmental engagement in supporting adoption prospects for hydrogen homes. Socially acceptable strategies for decarbonising the residential sector can be supported by actively responding to heterogeneous household preferences for living in a hydrogen home.

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author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
in
Sustainable Energy and Fuels
volume
8
issue
12
pages
48 pages
publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
external identifiers
  • scopus:85193515548
ISSN
2398-4902
DOI
10.1039/d4se00392f
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
id
e5d8c2d5-1846-4a82-a94b-3a1a5dfcf0ad
date added to LUP
2025-10-13 08:10:33
date last changed
2025-10-16 11:52:46
@article{e5d8c2d5-1846-4a82-a94b-3a1a5dfcf0ad,
  abstract     = {{<p>The UK Hydrogen Strategy (August 2021) and subsequent Heat and Buildings Strategy (October 2021) affirm that a strategic decision is set to be taken by 2026 on the prospect of residential decarbonisation via ‘hydrogen homes’. As this decision date draws nearer, quantitative insights on consumer perceptions of hydrogen-fuelled heating and cooking appliances remain limited. The existing knowledge deficit presents a substantial barrier to implementing a socially acceptable deployment pathway for residential decarbonisation. Despite recent efforts to advance the social science research agenda on hydrogen acceptance, few studies have advanced theoretical knowledge or pursued comprehensive statistical analyses. This study responds to the extant research gap by analysing the perceived adoption potential for hydrogen homes via partial least squares-necessary condition-multigroup analysis. Drawing on data from a nationally representative online survey (N = 1845) conducted in the UK, the adoption dynamics for domestic hydrogen are compared across four sub-groups of the population. The findings suggest that non-economic constructs such as safety perceptions and production perceptions are potentially more influential at this stage of the domestic hydrogen transition. Differences between consumer sub-groups are explained by safety, technology, and production perceptions, whereas financial perceptions are relatively homogeneous across the segments. These patterns underline the opportunity to strengthen residential decarbonisation efforts through segment-specific polices and strategic engagement with different parts of the housing stock. Policy makers and key stakeholders should factor consumer heterogeneity into net-zero decision-making processes by firstly acknowledging the amplifying effect of technology and environmental engagement in supporting adoption prospects for hydrogen homes. Socially acceptable strategies for decarbonising the residential sector can be supported by actively responding to heterogeneous household preferences for living in a hydrogen home.</p>}},
  author       = {{Gordon, Joel A. and Balta-Ozkan, Nazmiye and Haq, Anwar Ul and Nabavi, Seyed Ali}},
  issn         = {{2398-4902}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  number       = {{12}},
  pages        = {{2601--2648}},
  publisher    = {{Royal Society of Chemistry}},
  series       = {{Sustainable Energy and Fuels}},
  title        = {{Heterogeneous preferences for living in a hydrogen home : an advanced multigroup analysis}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4se00392f}},
  doi          = {{10.1039/d4se00392f}},
  volume       = {{8}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}