Opposing Wind Energy Landscapes: A Search for Common Cause

TitleOpposing Wind Energy Landscapes: A Search for Common Cause
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsPasqualetti, Martin J.
JournalAnnals of the Association of American Geographers
Volume101
Issue4
Pagination907-917
ISSN0004-5608
AbstractAlthough wind power is local, sustainable, affordable, and carbon free, mounting public opposition to the landscape changes it produces threatens its expansion. In an era when many countries are looking to renewable energy as an answer to questions about national security and the risks of climate change, it is important to explain the sources of this reaction. This article looks for similarities in public resistance to wind developments in four diverse settings: Palm Springs, California; Cape Cod, Massachusetts; the Isle of Lewis, Scotland; and Oaxaca State, Mexico. Despite the natural and cultural diversity among these places, there are five common threads in the opposition that has been experienced: immobility, the site specificity of the resource; immutability, an expectation of landscape permanence; solidarity, the close relationship between people and the land; imposition, a sense of marginalization; and place identity, a loss of security. Considering more deeply the relationship between land and life, in advance of the development of renewable energy resources, will help smooth the otherwise bumpy road toward a more sustainable future.
URLhttps://doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2011.568879
DOI10.1080/00045608.2011.568879
Short TitleOpposing Wind Energy Landscapes