Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study
Social acceptance of nuclear power has become a decisive factor in framing a sustainable energy policy. This study examines social acceptance for cancelling the construction of planned nuclear power plants (NPPs) and replacing them with other energy sources. The contingent valuation method (CVM) and...
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doaj-6306161d1b6640d680bcef7159f16e212020-11-25T01:25:57ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-10-011011383310.3390/su10113833su10113833Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation StudyJongRoul Woo0Sesil Lim1Yong-Gil Lee2Sung-Yoon Huh3Institute for Data, Systems, and Society, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MA 02139, USAErasmus School of Economics, Erasmus University Rotterdam, PO Box 1738, 3000DR Rotterdam, The NetherlandsDepartment of Energy Resources Engineering, Inha University, Incheon 22212, South KoreaDepartment of Energy Policy, Seoul National University of Science & Technology, Seoul 01811, South KoreaSocial acceptance of nuclear power has become a decisive factor in framing a sustainable energy policy. This study examines social acceptance for cancelling the construction of planned nuclear power plants (NPPs) and replacing them with other energy sources. The contingent valuation method (CVM) and cost⁻benefit analysis (CBA) are used to access the social acceptance and financial feasibility of such projects. Empirical analysis is based on the case of South Korea, where a similar policy is in progress under the new government. The CVM results show that a Korean household was willing to pay an additional KRW 1922.45/month (USD 1.80/month) for replacing seven 1-Gigawatt NPPs with other energy sources, which is about 3.5% of a household’s current electricity bill. The CBA suggests that the annual costs of replacing this amount of nuclear power capacity with renewables or liquefied natural gas is KRW 1291.40 billion (USD 1.21 billion) or KRW 1180.38 billion (USD 1.11 billion) larger than its benefits, which amounts to about 3% of total annual electricity generation costs in South Korea. As the additional costs of nuclear power replacement cannot be fully covered by the mean willingness-to-pay of the current acceptance level, moderate levels of social resistance are expected if all the additional costs are passed on to the end-users.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/11/3833social acceptancenuclear powerrenewable energyliquefied natural gascontingent valuation methodwillingness to pay |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
JongRoul Woo Sesil Lim Yong-Gil Lee Sung-Yoon Huh |
spellingShingle |
JongRoul Woo Sesil Lim Yong-Gil Lee Sung-Yoon Huh Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study Sustainability social acceptance nuclear power renewable energy liquefied natural gas contingent valuation method willingness to pay |
author_facet |
JongRoul Woo Sesil Lim Yong-Gil Lee Sung-Yoon Huh |
author_sort |
JongRoul Woo |
title |
Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study |
title_short |
Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study |
title_full |
Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study |
title_fullStr |
Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Financial Feasibility and Social Acceptance for Reducing Nuclear Power Plants: A Contingent Valuation Study |
title_sort |
financial feasibility and social acceptance for reducing nuclear power plants: a contingent valuation study |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Sustainability |
issn |
2071-1050 |
publishDate |
2018-10-01 |
description |
Social acceptance of nuclear power has become a decisive factor in framing a sustainable energy policy. This study examines social acceptance for cancelling the construction of planned nuclear power plants (NPPs) and replacing them with other energy sources. The contingent valuation method (CVM) and cost⁻benefit analysis (CBA) are used to access the social acceptance and financial feasibility of such projects. Empirical analysis is based on the case of South Korea, where a similar policy is in progress under the new government. The CVM results show that a Korean household was willing to pay an additional KRW 1922.45/month (USD 1.80/month) for replacing seven 1-Gigawatt NPPs with other energy sources, which is about 3.5% of a household’s current electricity bill. The CBA suggests that the annual costs of replacing this amount of nuclear power capacity with renewables or liquefied natural gas is KRW 1291.40 billion (USD 1.21 billion) or KRW 1180.38 billion (USD 1.11 billion) larger than its benefits, which amounts to about 3% of total annual electricity generation costs in South Korea. As the additional costs of nuclear power replacement cannot be fully covered by the mean willingness-to-pay of the current acceptance level, moderate levels of social resistance are expected if all the additional costs are passed on to the end-users. |
topic |
social acceptance nuclear power renewable energy liquefied natural gas contingent valuation method willingness to pay |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/11/3833 |
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