ARTICLE
15 March 2011

Pay To Play

More interesting news from the wind sector: "UK Will Pay Communities to Host Wind Farms." Renewable UK, the renewable energy trade association, is going to offer £20,000 a year in payments to communities willing to host clean energy.
United Kingdom Energy and Natural Resources
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.

More interesting news from the wind sector: "UK Will Pay Communities to Host Wind Farms." Renewable UK, the renewable energy trade association, is going to offer £20,000 a year in payments to communities willing to host clean energy. The amount would be paid every year for 20 years, and total £400,000:

The UK government is trying the new approach, in a joint program with the trade organization Renewable UK, to try to overcome organized local opposition.

"The package of measures will see wind farm developments of 5 MW and above that are submitted to planning authorities come with a commitment to community funds and/or benefits in kind," said a joint statement from the Department for Energy and Climate Change and Renewable UK.

I found this piece of the article on opposition to be most intriguing:

Charles Anglin at Renewable UK told the BBC, said the opposition is very "vocal and organized", yet "over the last decade, independent polls have showed 80% of people are in favor of wind power."

In the US this "vocal and organized" opposition to solar and wind has been shown to have direct ties to groups funded by the billionaire Koch Brothers. Just one of their fossil energy companies, the Oxbow Corporation sells 10 million metric tons of petroleum coke and 8 million metric tons of steam coal annually, and they have spent liberally on front groups that protest against renewable energy.

They fund the "research" published by The Heartland Institute like "Wind Turbines Killing Thousands of Birds in Northwest", and The Pacific Institute and smaller front groups – all to oppose wind power. (You'll never guess what form of energy actually does kill birds!) Koch spent millions to derail Cape Wind, and succeeded for a decade.

One of the front groups, Industrial Wind Action Group (which pushes the same persistent bogus stories about birdkills as The Heartland Institute) has expressed their "disappointment" in the British plan: "The wind farm industry is taking our money with one hand and expecting us to be grateful for the small change offered with the other," said the director of policy and research at the foundation, John Constable.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More