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Ownership (and Money) a Cure for NIMBY

John Farrell
May 09, 2011  |  5 Comments

Last month, a Grist writer noted sarcastically that “Money is a miracle cure for ‘wind turbine syndrome’.”  It is.  And environmental advocates frustrated by the (spurious?) health and aesthetic complaints raised by not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) actors would do well to consider why. 

The implication of the Grist post (and this attitude in general) is that we can’t green our energy system without sacrifice.  Getting to big carbon reductions will require enormous new renewable energy development and it will often happen in places where land was previously undeveloped (note: see this counter-argument).  The folks who live there, the NIMBYs, need to do their share. 

It’s awfully easy to offer sacrifice when you’re not on the altar.  And it’s worth considering what’s really behind the “syndrome.”

In a recent study by the ever-methodical Europeans, they found that opponents to new wind and solar power have two key desires: “people want to avoid environmental and personal harm” and they also want to “share in the economic benefits of their local renewable energy resources.”  It’s not that people are made physically ill by new renewable energy projects.  Rather, they are sick and tired of seeing the economic benefits of their local wind and sun leaving their community. 

Such opposition is perfectly rational, since investments in renewable energy can be quite lucrative (private developers and their equity partners routinely seek 10% return on investment or higher).  And the economic benefits of local ownership far outweigh the economic colonialism of absentee owners profiting from local renewable energy resources.

Of course, NIMBY-ism only sometimes manifests itself as an economic argument, and there’s a good reason for that, too.  In the project development process, there are precious few opportunities for public comment, and almost all of them represent up-or-down votes on project progress.  None offer an opportunity to change the structure of the development to allow for greater local buy-in or economic returns.  And no project will be halted simply because it isn’t locally owned.  Projects can and have been stopped on the basis of health and environmental impacts.  Enter Wind Turbine Syndrome.

There are alternatives.  In Germany, Ontario, Vermont, and Gainesville, Florida, local citizens can use a renewable energy policy – a feed-in tariff – that offers them a guaranteed long-term contract if they become a renewable energy producer.  This contract guarantees a reasonable, if small, return on investment and helps them secure financing.  In Germany, the program’s simplicity means that half of their 43,000 megawatts (MW) of renewable energy are owned by regular farmers or citizens. 

In Ontario, the provinicial clean energy program specifically requires project developers to use local content, guaranteeing a higher economic benefit for the province in exchange for its robust support for renewable energy.  The program is forecast to generate 43,000 local jobs in support of 5,000 MW of new, renewable energy. 

In the United Kingdom, public officials are piloting a “community wind fund” program for all new wind projects.  Under the program, each wind project must pay in £1000 per megawatt (~$1600 per MW) per year, for 25 years, into a community fund where the project is located. 

The impact for the community is significant.  Compared to the typical land leases (often $5,000 per turbine for the host landowner), the community fund payments would increase local revenue by over 60 percent, with the additional funds spread to the entire community rather than just the lucky turbine hosts.

The impact on turbine owner net revenue is small but not negligible, reducing the net present value of the project by about 3 percent.

It’s not that any of these policies represent the silver bullet for local opposition to new renewable energy projects, but they do address the underlying problem. 

The truth is that many people are frightened of being left behind by the clean energy revolution or angry that their local resources are tapped without commensurate local benefit.  They find that there's no way to be heard in the (democratic?) process without resorting to tangental arguments about health and viewsheds.

NIMBY has been misunderstood by the clean energy community.  It is not a knee jerk, it's a market failure.

When citizens see a new wind or solar energy project, it shouldn't be from the sidelines.  They should see it from the front seat, where they have hitched their wagon to environmental and economic progress by investing in a local energy project. 

Our energy policy should make that possible.  It doesn't.

Federal tax policy makes it very difficult to share renewable energy tax incentives among multiple investors.  Federal and state tax-based incentives preclude many local organizations (nonprofits, cities, schools) from owning wind turbines or solar panels.  And utility billing rules make it nearly impossible (in most states) to share the electricity output from a shared project that isn't utility owned.

There are brilliant examples of entrepreneurs overcoming these barriers to install community-based projects.  Developer Dan Juhl and others have a record of success with community wind in Minnesota.  The Clean Energy Collective is piloting a new community solar program in Colorado.  

There are even some policy ideas bringing hope.  Virtual net metering laws in eight states allow for sharing electricity output.  Colorado's solar gardens bill enshrines a small amount of community solar. 

But the theme is one of triumph over adversity, with local ownership the exception rather than the norm.  And without better energy policies that give locals a chance to buy in, the wind turbine syndrome epidemic will likely continue.

This post originally appeared on Energy Self-Reliant States, a resource of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance's New Rules Project.

Contact John Farrell at jfarrell@ilsr.org, find more content at energyselfreliantstates.org, follow @johnffarrell on Twitter, or friend the New Rules Project on Facebook.

The information and views expressed in this blog post are solely those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on this Web site and other publications. This blog was posted directly by the author and was not reviewed for accuracy, spelling or grammar.

5 Comments

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Douglas Prince
Douglas Prince
May 12, 2011
Clee - Maybe you have a tumor? Could be a tumor. You might wanna get checked for a tumor.

Tumor.

Oh, and move out of your sister's and get your own place, for god's sake. You're a grown woman.

And don't forget about that tumor.
Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
May 10, 2011
Clee,

45 db is an ordinance for parties at night for noise levels at 30 ft distance from the front door. Why? Because noise levels drop off at a cubic ratio of distance, and often those ordinances are set for communities with apartments - so the neighbors would be as little as 8 ft from the noise in an apartment. So in a region where 45 db can be heard issuing at 30 ft from the front door there might be a neighbor living 8 ft above the noise source who is experiencing 53 times that noise level - or ~62 db. You might think that that makes your case, but those noise ordinances are set under the assumption that party noise can be slept through by any human being under any circumstance.

Even still, party noise isn't white noise, it's not constant. The thump of a base beat or a the occasional crash of something even as low as 60 db might be enough to interrupt sleep or be considered a nuisance (to an extremely sensitive person), but a constant white noise at 60 db (outside the home) is absolutely impossible to be a distraction. Less than 10% of new dishwashers sold emit less than 60 db of sound, virtually no washing machines or dryers are even within 10 times that noise level (70 db), and no home older than 10 years has a heat pump that produces less than 60 db when it's operating. If a person has an aquarium or something of that sort, it's probably closer to 65 db... All of these options are WITHIN THE HOUSE. 60 db of external white noise would be the equivalent of having a bug zapper on your back porch that never actually zaps a bug (that would be louder, and no longer white noise). There's no way 60 db of external white noise could actually be a problem for a creature that has hearing capabilities within the human range if they are inside a building.
Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
May 10, 2011
Oops,
You are, of course, correct John. I was skimming quickly and responding quickly, and I mentally substituted M for k. That sometimes happens if I react to something before my morning cup of coffee kicks in.

Sorry about the glaring 3-order of magnitude error. I've edited that away, though my comment about the whining sue-happy freeloaders still stands. It's repulsive how these people who took no risks and offer up no sacrifice wish to just leech off of successful renewable energy projects by making up some BS "syndrome" and suing over it.


But you do have a point that perhaps the locals don't realize that they have the potential to invest in their own local wind farms. It might be interesting to see what would happen - and if it were in any way legal through the SEC - if there could be some locally available stock options issued for purchase upon request whenever a new wind farm begins construction, with a narrow window in which they could be taken advantage of.

I don't know.

I just know that I am personally disgusted - as an environmentalist and a responsible adult - whenever I hear of some bastard whining to a court about the "suffering" they "endured" because they experienced a 60 db hum.
John Farrell
John Farrell
May 10, 2011
Glenn,

Please explain your doubling comment. A wind project costs $1600 per kW, not $1600 per MW (the price the UK is suggesting).

Also, perhaps the wind developers should take your comment about investing to heart and send out a prospectus along with any public meeting about a new wind project. You may find it a trivial bit of knowledge, but perhaps the folks living near the turbine feel differently.

-John
Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
May 10, 2011
John,

There is nothing - at all - that would prevent the people within the community from investing into the companies that are developing wind in their communities. As you stated in the article, this would give a reasonable return if the company is making ~10% on its transaction.
That's how the locals can avoid being left behind.

Forcing wind developers to be completely exploited by the locals merely insures that the wind won't be developed there... because if the developer was forced to pay high fees to the locals they would no longer get a 10% return.

The best cure for 'wind turbine syndrome' still seems to be dragging the sue-happy shitheads out and giving them real problems to complain about. (think crowbars)

There's nothing admirable about a person who didn't want to take any financial risk investing in something, who then attempts to sue the people who did once it proves to be profitable. These people should either shut up or remove themselves from the community that so 'offends' them. There should be no other option granted.

60 db simply doesn't hurt anyone. Period.

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John Farrell

John Farrell

John Farrell directs the Energy Self-Reliant States and Communities program at ILSR and he focuses on energy policy developments that best expand the benefits of local ownership and dispersed generation of renewable energy. His latest paper,...
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