Peer-to-peer solar and social rewards: evidence from a field experiment

Carattini, S., Gillingham, K. T., Meng, X. & Yoeli, E. (2022). Peer-to-peer solar and social rewards: evidence from a field experiment. (Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment Working Paper 383). Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, London School of Economics and Political Science.
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Observability and social rewards have been demonstrated to influence the adoption of pro-social behavior in a variety of contexts. This study implements a field experiment to examine the influence of observability and social rewards in the context of a novel pro-social behavior: peer-to-peer solar. Peer-to-peer solar offers an opportunity to households who cannot have solar on their homes to access solar energy from their neighbors. However, unlike solar installations, peer-to-peer solar is an invisible form of pro-environmental behavior. We implemented a set of randomized campaigns using Facebook ads in the Massachusetts cities of Cambridge and Somerville, in partnership with a peer-to-peer company, which agreed to offer to a subsample of customers the possibility to share “green reports” online, providing shareable information about their greenness. We find that interest in peer-to-peer solar increases by up to 30% when “green reports,” which would make otherwise invisible behavior visible, are mentioned in the ads

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