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Understanding Public Reactions to Wind Farm Developments through Communication and Integration. Mhairi Aitken. Introduction. UK government targets in response to climate change and the ‘energy crisis’ - 60% reduction in carbon emissions by 2050
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Understanding Public Reactions to Wind Farm Developments through Communication and Integration Mhairi Aitken
Introduction UK government targets in response to climate change and the ‘energy crisis’ - 60% reduction in carbon emissions by 2050 - 20% of electricity produced from renewable sources by 2020 Enormous potential of wind power in the UK Public hostility and opposition creates significant obstacle to meeting targets
“yes-sayers” Renewable energy as viable alternative to traditional energy Climate change is a real and serious threat Wind energy is unlimited Wind energy is clean Wind energy is safe “yes-sayers” and “nay-sayers”(Krohn & Damborg 1999) “nay-sayers” • Renewable energy is not the answer • Wind energy is unreliable • Wind energy is expensive • Visual Impact • Wind turbines are noisy
Conventional Explanation NIMBY-ism (not-in-my-back-yard) Widespread support for renewable energy and wind power Strong local opposition to particular wind farm developments
NIMBY discredited • Recently come to be viewed as outdated and over-simplistic • Multiple motivations and factors influence individual reactions to wind farms • Allows opposition to be discredited despite real concerns It is now widely acknowledged that communication with and integration of local communities in planning and decision-making processes is vital.
North Wiltshire Biomass Energy Plant (Upreti & Horst 2004) Biomass plants refused planning permission due to public anxieties over impacts and risk Strong opposition – BLOT (Biomass Lumbered on Our Town) – 439 letters of opposition Lack of communication between developers and community Communication came too late – opposition already too strong Developers’ approach perceived to be top-down Initial negative perception creates suspicion Examples Orkney Community Wind Turbine (Orkney Renewable Energy Ltd. 2005) • Single 850kW turbine • Funded by consortium of Orkney residents • Scottish machine, local expertise and business utilised wherever possible • Local investment = local enthusiasm • Developers are perceived to have credibility and local interests at heart
But it’s not just for small “local” projects! Large and/or external companies can also create positive community relations through effective and proactive stakeholder management. Example: Albany, Western Australia (Ebert 1999) 15km outside Albany city – ‘magnificent coastal environment’, significant tourism, scenic area, environmentally sensitive and highly visible location Public engaged with from earliest stages – including flexibility over certain elements of design. Benefits highlighted, but down-sides not hidden – meaningful debate Developers perceived to be honest and trustworthy
Vocalising the Silent Majority • Staunch opposition groups may not respond • Majority of people (apparently) support/do not oppose wind farms • Community engagement and consultation should focus on the ‘silent majority’ Democracy requires all views to be hearddominant opposition groups should not be able to hijack decision-making processes
Privileged/Latent groups(Olson 1965, discussed in Toke 2002) • Privileged Groups: small, minority groups with strong interests and motivation to organise • Latent Groups: Typically larger groups but without strong interests or motivation to organise • Privileged groups will be better organised and hence minority interests may ‘defeat’ those of latent groups despite being unrepresentative • Large groups require incentives – or the group must already exist for some other function
The necessity/appropriateness of Participatory Techniques Appropriate policies/developments best achieved through consultation with affected communities Participation of local communities in decision-making and/or planning will lead to more appropriate and desirable outcomes – therefore the public will be more accepting and positive It appears almost common-sense that participation is a desirable thing
Criticisms of Participatory Techniques • Simplistic view of communities • If participation is ‘good’, non-participation must be ‘bad’ • Power remains at the ‘top’ • Participatory techniques are cosmetic
Essential Conditions for Good Participation • Power to the communities • Trust • Transparency
Conclusions and Implications • It is essential that developers engage with local communities, in order to understand and address their concerns • Local communities will react negatively where they do not trust or know the developer • Trust requires a meaningful process of public consultation and participation • Meaningful participation requires the empowerment of local communities including real input into certain key decisions (i.e. number of turbines, size, location, design) • Where this is not possible, an open discussion of the reasons and justifications for decisions which have already been made must take place • Local communities must be empowered rather than dominated
Understanding Public Reactions to Wind Farm Developments through Communication and Integration Mhairi Aitken