Home | Events | Site Map | Contact Us
Click for more information about joining ELI. Click to donate to ELI. Click to subscribe to ELI. Click for information about ELI events.
# Click to log in to member and subscribers information.
#
Click to read About ELI.
Click for information on Program Areas.
Click for Publications.
Click for membership information.
Click for Development information.
Click for News & Press Releases.
ELI Vision Statement: A healthy environment, prosperous economies, and vibrant communities founded on the rule of law.
Follow ELI on Twitter. Follow ELI on Linkedin. Follow ELI on Facebook.
Bookmark and Share
 

For Immediate Release: February 26, 2013

Local Elected Officials Hold Keys to America’s Wind Energy Future

(Washington, DC) — The Environmental Law Institute (ELI) today released a guide to the key issues local elected officials will face when deciding where to site large wind energy facilities. The nation’s local governments will be dealing with the more than 100 new commercial scale wind farms that will be sited across America this year, and with thousands more to come in the next decade. With 60,000 megawatts of wind energy facilities already in place, this is the fastest growing source of electric power generation in American communities.

Siting Wind Energy Facilities: What do Local Elected Officials Need to Know? reviews what is known about the visual impacts, sound impacts, safety, recommended setback distances, impacts to roads, wildlife conservation, and decommissioning of wind energy facilities. County, city, and township rules and ordinances can have a big influence on these facilities, and especially upon where they locate and how they operate. But local elected officials often come to these decisions with no background information on wind facilities. Thus, they are often subject to assertions about impacts, or the science, or best practices that are based on anecdote or biased information. This makes the learning curve unnecessarily steep. ELI’s guide draws on the best government and academic literature, and from ordinances enacted around the nation, to provide a critical starting point for busy officials seeking to know what impacts are real, what concerns can be readily addressed, what practices are recognized as best, and what concerns require more information.

“Local officials need a credible place to start,” says ELI Senior Attorney James McElfish. “While each wind project will present its own issues, there is no need to start over in each community. A lot is already known. This guide takes a common-sense approach to each issue and documents each statement of fact with high-quality links to studies and findings,” McElfish maintains. The guide also highlights important sources of local ordinance-drafting information that are relied on by local officials, including recent recommendations by the National Association of Counties (NACO) and the American Planning Association (APA).

Siting Wind Energy Facilities: What do Local Elected Officials Need to Know? is a publication of ELI’s Sustainable Use of Land Program, which advances ELI’s organizational vision of “a healthy environment, prosperous economies, and vibrant communities founded on the rule of law.” It follows other ELI work in the renewable energy field, including State Enabling Legislation for Commercial-Scale Wind Power Siting and the Local Government Role (2011) and Siting Wind Facilities on State-Owned Lands and Waters (2011). The new guide was supported by a grant from the Wallace Global Fund.

The Environmental Law Institute® is an independent, non-profit research and educational organization based in Washington, DC. The Institute serves the environmental profession in business, government, the private bar, public interest organizations, academia, and the press. For further information from the Environmental Law Institute, please contact Brett Kitchen at 202-939-3833 or pressrequest@eli.org.
###

On the Importance of Judges
by ELI President John Cruden

 

Plastic Bag Laws Proliferate
by ELI Senior Attorney Linda Breggin

 

Lesson From Liberia, Where a New Law Is Not Enough
by ELI Senior Attorney Sandra Nichols

#

May 21, 2013
In-Lieu Fee Mitigation: Short-Term Assurances

May 30, 2013
NRDA: Pros, Cons & Mechanics of Cooperation

May 30, 2013
Book Release: Food, Agriculture, and Environmental Law

June 3, 2013
In-Lieu Fee Mitigation: Long-Term Financing

June 10, 2013
Summit: Private Environmental Governance

June 11, 2013
Monthly Climate Change Briefing

June 11, 2013
Summer School: Careers in Envtl Law & Policy

June 11-16, 2013
ELI Summer School Series

June 13, 2013
Summer School: NEPA, ESA & Fundamentals

MORE EVENTS
©2013 Environmental Law Institute. All rights reserved. Copyright & Disclaimer