Description
Social cost-benefit analysis (CBA) of projects has been successfully applied in different fields such as transport, energy, health, education, and environment, climate change policy, but often considered impossible for research infrastructures because of the impredictable benefits of scientific discovery. We have designed a CBA model for large scale research infrastructures and applied it to the LHC. After estimating investment and operation costs spread over 30 years (to 2025), combining data from the CERN and the experiments, we evaluate the benefits of knowledge output (publications), human capital development, technological spillovers, and cultural effects. Additionally, willingness-to-pay for the pure value of discovery at the LHC by the general public is estimated through a survey of around 1,ooo respondendents in four countries. Setting to zero any until now unpredictable economic value of discovery of the Higgs boson (or of any new physics), we compute a probability distribution for the net present value of the LHC through Monte Carlo simulation of 19 input, output and valuation variables and show that there is currently 92% probability that social benefits of the LHC exceed its costs. The approach and the results shed light on the social net benefits of research infrastructures for the first time in an empirically testable form.
Project details
The results on the LHC and the new ideas on how to proceed for the evaluation of Future Circular Collider (FCC) during the conference "Machines to discover, from the Higgs boson to the new physics".
- A preview of the analysis conducted by the Milan State University team is available online on the Future Circular Collider website
- The case of the Large Hadron Collider LHC at CERN
- CBA of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to 2025 and beyond: Was it Worth it? To learn more.
- Socio economic impact of large research infrastructures: Alba Synchrotron. To learn more.
- How to Evaluate Socio-Economic Impact of Large Research Infrastructures? Click here and here to know more.
- Future Circular Collider Conference – FCC Week 2019. To learn more.