Public appetite for hydrogen fuels and green initiatives is greater than policymakers assume, researchers have found. A four-year ?400,000 study by a Salford University team looked at attitudes to the use of hydrogen fuels. Rob Flynn, a sociology professor, said: "Many policymakers assume that the public are ill-informed and resistant to measures to prevent climate change and, as a result, tend to exclude them when developing policy. We've discovered that this is not the case." The study has been extended for four years and awarded over ?500,000 by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
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