Wind Farms, Property Values Can Grow Together
Report
CHICAGO, Oct 01, 2007 /PRNewswire
A new study of wind farms in two states shows that wind energy facilities do
not harm property values, and some new-home buyers are embracing the
benefits of such 'green energy' developments in their areas.
The study of property sales from 1998 through 2006 indicates no differences
in property values in the wind farm areas as compared with other similar
areas.
The real estate study was prepared by Peter J. Poletti (Ph.D., MAI),
President of Poletti and Associates, an Illinois Certified General Real
Estate Appraiser. The study compared sales of homes and farmland properties
within an area close to the wind farm, the "target area," to those in a
"control area" with similar characteristics but outside any areas of wind
farms. The study was commissioned by Chicago-based Invenergy Wind LLC.
"Many people like the graceful look of modern wind turbines, and they enjoy
knowing that their community is helping to produce pollution-free energy and
being a part of solving our global warming problems," said Howard Learner,
Executive Director of the Environmental Law & Policy Center.
The Poletti and Associates study can be found at: http://www.invenergyllc.com/community.html
(then click Property Value Impact Study tab)
The Poletti and Associates study reinforces other studies in recent years
that have also found that wind farms have no negative impact on nearby
property values. For example, a 2003 study by the Renewable Energy Policy
Project of 25,000 property sales within view of 10 wind farms in seven
states revealed "the statistical analysis does not support a contention that
sales within the view shed of wind developments suffer or perform poorer
than in a comparable region." In fact, the study found that "for the great
majority of projects the property values actually rose more quickly in the
view shed than they did in the comparable community." The Renewable Energy
Policy Project was funded by, among others, the U.S. Department of Energy,
National Renewable Energy Lab, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The report can be found at: http://www.crest.org/articles/static/1/binaries/wind_online_final.pdf
More recently, an April 2006 study from Bard College of a 20-turbine Madison
County, New York wind project took care to isolate effects by visiting each
home and measuring the distance to the nearest turbine and to what degree
the home could see the wind facility. This study also concluded that there
was no evidence that the facility affected homes values in a measurable way,
even when concentrating on homes that sold near the facility or homes that
sold with a prominent view of the turbines. This report can be found at:
http://www.aceny.org/pdfs/misc/
effects_windmill_vis_on_prop_values_hoen2006.pdf
"A family's home is usually their greatest financial asset, so concerns
about property values must be taken seriously," said Thomas Gray, Director
of Communications at the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). "The good
news is that land value studies so far show no harmful effects to property
values from nearby wind energy projects."
More and more as communities and individuals seek green energy solutions,
environmentally friendly technology is viewed positively. For example,
RE/MAX International, Inc., in a recent "Where do you want to be?" national
advertising campaign, invites consumers to fantasize about their perfect
homes. One ad features an upscale home near to a wind turbine, reflecting
the desires of an environmentally concerned couple who are looking for an
energy efficient home.
In addition to property values, some wind farm opponents have also suggested
that such developments can hurt tourism. While no such evidence exists,
there is evidence that tourism has increased in places such as state parks
after wind turbines have been erected.
"A wind farm is another unique and educational attraction to show the kids
along the road," said Jan Kostner, Deputy Director of the Illinois Bureau of
Tourism. "In many cases there are even weekend tours of wind turbines and
parents bring their kids to get a better look and learn about creating clean
energy."
About Invenergy Wind LLC
Chicago-based Invenergy Wind LLC is an affiliate of Invenergy LLC, a
developer, owner and operator of utility-scale electricity generating
facilities including wind energy and natural gas-fired projects. Invenergy
Wind currently has 12 facilities representing more than 1,200 megawatts of
wind energy projects in operation and construction in the US and Europe.
Wind energy projects completed and under construction by Invenergy Wind are
expected to generate more than 3.6 billion kilowatt hours of electricity per
year with clean and renewable generation technology, enough to power almost
400,000 homes.
Invenergy is headquartered in Chicago and has North American offices in
Denver, Washington D.C., Toronto, Milwaukee, Tampa, San Francisco, and
Austin, Texas. Overseas offices are located in London, Warsaw, Budapest and
Athens.
For more information visit
http://www.invenergyllc.com
SOURCE Invenergy Wind LLC
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