ABSTRACT

Adopting an interdisciplinary social science approach, this book examines community reactions to wind farms to form a new understanding of what facilitates social acceptance.

Based on empirical research, Wind Power and Public Engagement investigates opposition to wind energy and considers the advantages as well as the limits of the co-operative model of wind farm community ownership. Giuseppe Pellegrini-Masini compares the role of co-operative schemes with community benefits schemes in increasing acceptability, and also sheds light on the impact of social factors including pro-environmental attitudes, perceived benefits and costs, place attachment, trust, as well as individuals’ resources such as information and income. Five research cases are investigated in England and Scotland, including the first local, community-owned wind farm co-operative in the UK. Critically reviewing existing social research theories, the book offers a new viewpoint, integrating rational choice and environmental attitudinal theories, from which to assess and understand the social acceptability of wind energy. It also highlights new opportunities for raising consensus in communities around locally proposed wind farms.

The book will be of great interest to students and scholars of renewable energy, energy policy, environmental sociology, environmental psychology, environmental planning and sustainability in general, as well as policymakers.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

Citizens and renewable energy

Determinants of civic engagement

chapter 2|44 pages

Wind energy acceptability—what, how and when

All the variables at stake

chapter 3|13 pages

Testing the theory

Methods and data collection

chapter 4|42 pages

The first community-owned co-operative in the UK

Lessons from Westmill Wind Farm

chapter 6|14 pages

A theory of social acceptability of wind farms

Finding a place for the co-operative model

chapter |5 pages

Conclusions