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NIMBY thinking behind drop in Windfarm approvals.

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"Not in My Back Yard" thinking is to blame for the dramatic fall in wind farm planning approvals, the British Wind Energy Association has complained.

Figures revealed at its annual conference show that local authorities approved just 25% of such applications this year. This contrasts with 63% approved in 2007.

Coriolis Energy, a specialist independent windfarm company maintained that pressure from nimby campaigners is forcing councils to make incorrect decisions. "It would make more sense if authorities did not have the deciding say on these matters," company development director Vicky Portwain claimed.

But Campaign to Protect Rural England chief executive Shaun Spiers challenged the wind energy industry to engage local people and work within the planning system.

BWEA, the UK's leading renewable energy trade association, warns that a clear implication of the latest report from energy regulator Ofgem is that there is no alternative to going green.

The report, released last month, flags up four energy market scenarios to 2020. It states that having less renewables on the system, compared to targets, could end up costing consumers up to 60% more on household bills - due to fossil fuel price volatility. The report also states that the price of oil has quadrupled over the last 10 years, and the price of coal and gas has doubled. Significantly, the document does not offer a 'no renewables' model.

BWEA states that the 'Dash for Energy' scenario, which predicts only 15% of renewable electricity installed, or half of the UK's 2020 target, is also the costliest to consumers, as the cheap and plentiful energy we should be securing from renewables will have to be provided by expensive oil and gas. Only the so called 'Green Stimulus' scenario is set to deliver a triple whammy of modest price increases, renewable energy targets and carbon reductions.

 

 


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