Waste-to-energy risk perception typology: health, politics and environmental impacts

被引:1
|
作者
Subiza-Perez, Mikel [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Zabala, Aiora [4 ,5 ]
Groten, Daniel [1 ]
Vozmediano, Laura [6 ]
San Juan, Cesar [6 ]
Ibarluzea, Jesus [2 ,3 ,7 ,8 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basque Country UPV EHU, Dept Clin & Hlth Psychol & Res Methods, Donostia San Sebastian, Spain
[2] Inst Salud Carlos III, Spanish Consortium Res Epidemiol & Publ Hlth CIBER, Madrid, Spain
[3] Biodonostia Hlth Res Inst, Grp Environm Epidemiol & Child Dev, Donostia San Sebastian, Spain
[4] Open Univ, Sch Social Sci & Global Studies, Milton Keynes, England
[5] Univ Cambridge, Dept Land Econ, Cambridge, England
[6] Univ Basque Country UPV EHU, Dept Social Psychol, Donostia San Sebastian, Spain
[7] Basque Govt, Subdirectorate Publ Hlth & Addict Gipuzkoa, Dept Hlth, San Sebastian, Spain
[8] Univ Basque Country UPV EHU, Fac Psychol, San Sebastian, Spain
关键词
Q methodology; controversial facilities; attitudes; profiling; social acceptance; mixed methods; PUBLIC ACCEPTANCE; MANAGEMENT; ATTITUDES; TRUST; POWER; INFORMATION; POLICY; PLANTS; NIMBY;
D O I
10.1080/13669877.2023.2259402
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Where strategies to reduce and recycle urban solid waste are insufficient, waste incineration is proposed as second-best management. Waste-to-energy facilities often raise remarkable public controversy, which the Not-In-My-Backyard effect does not explain sufficiently. Heterogeneous concerns lead to diverse risk perception profiles that standard psychometric scales cannot uncover. We explore this diversity of profiles by analyzing risk perceptions about a recently built waste-to-energy facility in Gipuzkoa (Spain), a case underlined by a decades-long public debate about waste management alternatives. Using Q, a semi-qualitative method, we identify risk perceptions within a diverse sample of fifty participants, including residents at different distances to the facility. We identify three main types of risk perception based on the relative importance respondents gave to 26 possible perceived risks of the facility. We define risk perception types according to the concerns that respondents with similar views emphasized most: human health, politics and institutions, and local social-ecological impacts. Whereas human-health and social-ecological concerns could be partially addressed with information-including timely and accessible reporting of effluent monitoring-and improved safety, building institutional trust to mitigate the concerns in the second risk perception type requires longer-term dynamics. Understanding heterogeneous risk profiles as done in this study can support adequate communication strategies and help policymakers prioritize governance areas to improve. Our results contribute to understanding social-environmental risk perceptions associated with controversial facilities. Using an approach that is new in this domain, these results add nuanced understanding that complements the quantitative profiling prevalent in the literature on risk perceptions and about waste-to-energy plants.
引用
收藏
页码:1101 / 1118
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Assessing stakeholders' risk perception in public-private partnerships for waste-to-energy projects: A case study of Nepal
    Ghimire, Mukesh
    Pandey, Sudeshana
    Woo, JongRoul
    [J]. ENERGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, 2024, 79
  • [22] Risk identification for PPP waste-to-energy incineration projects in China
    Song, Jinbo
    Song, Danrong
    Zhang, Xueqing
    Sun, Yan
    [J]. ENERGY POLICY, 2013, 61 : 953 - 962
  • [23] Public Perception towards Waste-to-Energy as a Waste Management Strategy: A Case from Shandong, China
    Yuan, Xueliang
    Fan, Xiaohan
    Liang, Jiaxin
    Liu, Mengyue
    Teng, Yuqiang
    Ma, Qiao
    Wang, Qingsong
    Mu, Ruimin
    Zuo, Jian
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2019, 16 (16)
  • [24] Assessment of environmental and economic performance of Waste-to-Energy facilities in Thai cities
    Menikpura, S. N. M.
    Sang-Arun, Janya
    Bengtsson, Magnus
    [J]. RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2016, 86 : 576 - 584
  • [25] Waste-to-Energy Process to Recover Dangerous Pollutants in an Environmental Protected Area
    Mora, Pedro
    Barettino, Daniel
    Ponce, Antonio
    Sanchez-Martin, Laura
    Llamas, Bernardo
    [J]. APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2021, 11 (03): : 1 - 15
  • [26] Potential concerns and impacts of CCA-treated wood for the waste-to-energy industry
    Townsend, T
    Solo-Gabriele, H
    [J]. NAWTEC11: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 11TH ANNUAL NORTH AMERICAN WASTE TO ENERGY CONFERENCE, 2003, : 103 - 111
  • [27] Comparative risk assessment of the health and environmental impacts of various energy systems
    Gheorghe, Adrian V.
    [J]. International Journal of Environment and Pollution, 1994, 4 (3-4) : 329 - 337
  • [28] Waste-to-energy nexus for circular economy and environmental protection: Recent trends in hydrogen energy
    Sharma, Surbhi
    Basu, Soumen
    Shetti, Nagaraj P.
    Aminabhavi, Tejraj M.
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 713
  • [29] Techno-economic assessment of energy and environmental impact of waste-to-energy electricity generation
    Asim, Muhammad
    Kumar, Rohan
    Kanwal, Ammara
    Shahzad, Amir
    Ahmad, Ashfaq
    Farooq, Muhammad
    [J]. ENERGY REPORTS, 2023, 9 : 1087 - 1097
  • [30] Techno-economic assessment of energy and environmental impact of waste-to-energy electricity generation
    Asim, Muhammad
    Kumar, Rohan
    Kanwal, Ammara
    Shahzad, Amir
    Ahmad, Ashfaq
    Farooq, Muhammad
    [J]. ENERGY REPORTS, 2023, 9 : 1087 - 1097