支付意愿
持续时间(音乐)
电
停电
自然灾害
准备
业务
弹性(材料科学)
极端天气
心理弹性
环境经济学
自然资源经济学
经济
气候变化
工程类
功率(物理)
电力系统
地理
热力学
心理学
生态学
量子力学
生物
心理治疗师
管理
微观经济学
物理
气象学
电气工程
艺术
文学类
作者
Sunhee Baik,Alexander Davis,Jun Woo Park,Selin Sirinterlikci,M. Granger Morgan
出处
期刊:Nature Energy
[Springer Nature]
日期:2020-03-16
卷期号:5 (3): 250-258
被引量:56
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41560-020-0581-1
摘要
Climate-induced extreme weather events, as well as other natural and human-caused disasters, have the potential to increase the duration and frequency of large power outages. Resilience, in the form of supplying a small amount of power to homes and communities, can mitigate outage consequences by sustaining critical electricity-dependent services. Public decisions about investing in resilience depend, in part, on how much residential customers value those critical services. Here we develop a method to estimate residential willingness-to-pay for back-up electricity services in the event of a large 10-day blackout during very cold winter weather, and then survey a sample of 483 residential customers across northeast USA using that method. Respondents were willing to pay US$1.7–2.3 kWh–1 to sustain private demands and US$19–29 day–1 to support their communities. Previous experience with long-duration outages and the framing of the cause of the outage (natural or human-caused) did not affect willingness-to-pay. Future resilience planning for large-area long-duration electricity outages requires, in part, estimates of what electricity consumers are willing to pay for preparedness. Baik et al. arrive at those estimates using a representative survey and find some willingness to invest in community resilience.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI