News & Articles on Community Power
Developing renewable energy on the scale needed to make the energy transition will require public acceptance. Unlike nuclear power, where society can force a single plant on a community for the benefit of society at large, renewable energy will have to become ubiquitous in our communities and on our landscapes. This can only be possible when the majority accept this transformation. Experience has taught that acceptance is greatest when neighbors and the community at large can participate in the renewable energy revolution. The beauty of renewable energy is that everyone can take part–and own a stake in their future–when given an opportunity to do so. The challenge is creating the policies that make this possible, whether it’s for a community wind project or a solar garden.
BBC: Italian town’s wind farm windfall (Tocco Da Casauria)
By
Duncan Kennedy
That creates a profit of nearly 170,000 euros (£144,000, $227,000) a year and it is that money which is being pumped back into local services, enabling everything from street-cleaning and school meals, to grass-cutting and street-lighting to be subsidised.
Status of Social Economy Provision of Wind Electric Energy in Alberta
By
Julie Macarthur
Related Files community_wind_in_alberta-pdf
Community Based Energy Development (C-BED) Legislation in Minnesota
By
Paul Gipe
Minnesota’s State Senate passed a bill with the C-BED proposal in May, 2005. The measure passed the Assembly on …
