Article

Sunspots That Matter: The Effect of Weather on Solar Technology Adoption

Stefan Lamp

Abstract

This paper tests for the presence of behavioral biases in household decisions to adopt solar photovoltaic installations using exogenous variation in weather. I find that residential technology uptake responds to exceptional weather, defined as deviations from the long-term mean, in line with the average time gap between decision-making and completion of the installation. In particular, a one standard deviation increase in sunshine hours during the purchase period leads to an approximate increase of 4.7% in weekly solar PV installations. This effect persists in aggregate data. I consider a range of potential mechanisms and find suggestive evidence for projection bias and salience as key drivers of my results.

Replaces

Stefan Lamp, Sunspots that matter: the effect of weather on solar technology adoption, TSE Working Paper, n. 18-879, January 2018.

Reference

Stefan Lamp, Sunspots That Matter: The Effect of Weather on Solar Technology Adoption, Environmental and Resource Economics, vol. 84, April 2023, p. 1179–1219.

Published in

Environmental and Resource Economics, vol. 84, April 2023, p. 1179–1219