Informed public opinion in the Netherlands: Evaluation of CO2 capture and storage technologies in comparison with other CO2 mitigation options
Publication date
2012
Authors
Best-Waldhober, M. de
Daamen, D.
Ramirez, C.A.
Faaij, A.P.C.
Hendriks, C.
Visser, Erika de
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
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License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
In this study, 995 respondents in a representative sample of the Dutch general population are set in the
situation of policymakers: they are faced with the issue of fulfilling the Dutch demand for energy in
2030 in such a way that emissions of carbon dioxide will be reduced by 50%. In the Information-Choice
Questionnaire (ICQ) that was developed for this, respondents evaluated information from experts on
seven options for CO2 emission reduction and their consequences. Two CCS options were compared to
two energy efficiency options, a wind energy option, a biomass energy option, and a nuclear energy option.
Results show that people are not that enthusiastic regarding the two CCS options. These are evaluated 5.3
and 5.9 on average on a scale of 1–10 and not often chosen as one of the three preferred options, but they
are also rarely rejected. Most of the other options in the questionnaire were evaluated rather positively,
except nuclear energy and the more ambitious efficiency option. Analysis shows that the evaluation of
the information regarding consequences moderately influences how options are evaluated overall. The
results further indicate that the CCS options are evaluated less positively due to the comparison with
other options.
Keywords
Information-Choice Questionnaire, Public opinion, CCS, Acceptance, Mitigation