From New York to California, localities have taken action to stymie solar and wind energy projects to preserve their way of life, according to Manhattan Institute senior fellow Robert Bryce.
âAll-renewable scenarios rely on the vacant-land myth, the faulty notion that thereâs endless amounts of unused, uncared-for land out there in flyover country thatâs ready and waiting to be covered with forests of renewable-energy stuff,â Bryce told Senate lawmakers in a hearing Thursday.
âThe truth is quite different,â Bryce said in prepared testimony for the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
âRural communities, even entire states, are resisting or rejecting wind, solar, and high-voltage transmission projects and that opposition is already slowing deployment of new renewable capacity in the U.S., Canada, and Europe,â Bryce said.
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Bryce chastised the âscantâ media coverage of the growing resistance to renewable energy projects, which is especially important given Democrats push for sweeping plans, like the Green New Deal, to significantly ramp up renewable energy use.
âBy contrast, national media coverage of the growing backlash against deployment of large-scale renewable-energy projects has been scant,â Bryce said. âThat lack of media coverage is particularly true when it comes to controversies about wind-energy deployment.â
Itâs not just wind energy development, Bryce said, but opposition to renewables in general that the media has glossed over in recent years. But that opposition complicates sweeping plans, like the Green New Deal, to power the U.S. on renewables.
âSince 2015, I have been tracking rural opposition to wind energy…