Place-making and trust-building: The influence of policy on host community responses to wind farms

13. Climate action 0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering 02 engineering and technology 7. Clean energy
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2015.02.008 Publication Date: 2015-02-16T06:15:22Z
ABSTRACT
Abstract This article assesses the impact of wind energy policy choices on host community responses. Two key explanations (place-making and trust-building) for host community responses are identified from the substantial social science literature investigating local community reaction to wind farms. The relationship between these two key factors and policy choices is explored through a comparative case study of five wind farms during a time of major policy change in Ontario, Canada. These five wind projects are all located within a 50 km of each other but are built under different policy regimes, with different ownership arrangements and are of different sizes. They provide a basis to assess the impact of three specific policy elements – approval authority, community benefit arrangements and spatial restrictions of turbine placement – on the place-making and trust-building potential of wind projects in the host communities. We identify a wide range of interactions and conclude that the policy choice to elevate project approval to a central authority has had the most damaging effect.
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