Reacting to the Rural Burden: Understanding Opposition to Utility‐Scale Solar Development in Upstate New York

Author:

Nilson Roberta S.12ORCID,Stedman Richard C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Cornell University

2. Electricity Markets and Policy Department Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Abstract

AbstractRural landscapes are under increasing development pressure from utility‐scale solar (USS) energy facilities while public attitudes toward these facilities remain poorly documented and understood. This study explores whether opposition to USS in upstate New York is shaped at least in part by perceived rural burden—the idea that rural people and places are unfairly expected to provide new renewable energy in response to urban demand. We explore the idea of rural burden with measures of distributive injustice, procedural injustice, periphery identity, and place attachment. We use a survey (N = 421) of residents of western and northern New York, regions with substantial new and pending USS development. We find that 42 percent of residents oppose USS installations in or near their local communities, 14 percent neither support nor oppose, and 44 percent support. Perceived distributive and procedural injustice, along with place attachment have the strongest effect on opposition, while socio‐demographic attributes, political ideology, and climate change beliefs were insignificant. These findings suggest that opposition to large scale renewable energy development exemplifies a rural environmental justice concern justified for many by the perceived legacy of exploitation in natural resource development.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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4. Understanding Responses to a UK High‐Voltage Powerline Proposal: The Role of Place and Project‐Based Social Representations;Bailey Etienne;Papers on Social Representations,2016

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