As renewable energy becomes more widespread in the United States, large and bipartisan majorities of Americans say they wouldn’t mind fields of solar panels and wind turbines being built in their communities, according to a Washington Post-University of Maryland poll.
People don't object to them unless they are near them. There's a phrase for it. Nimbyism. Not in my backyard
I think windmills are beautiful, solar panels in fields a bit harder on the eyes, but there's plenty of places to put solar without ruining outstanding areas of natural beauty
I'd love it if my backyard (or just beyond it) was a wind farm.
Open space
No traffic
No yappy dogs
No Karens/Kevins/Krotchgoblins pretending their backyard is a combination kitchen and living room, filling the air with wood smoke and sportsball shouting on an otherwise beautiful day/evening where I'd prefer to have my windows open and would if there wasn't a perpetual party just outside of said windows (yes this is a very specific complaint and no I would not have thought this was something to be annoyed about until it became chronic and annoying)
seriously people freak out about the nonexistent noise of wind turbines, meanwhile they merrily live next to high-traffic roads that not only have studies to show how much the noise harms you, there's also the lovely air pollution to breathe in!
Every time I've driven past a wind farm I think it looks amazing. I would love to just stare at them from my backyard if they weren't all in the middle of nowhere.
As someone who used to drive up and back from LA to the SF Bay Area in college all the time, I always enjoyed going through the Altamont Pass and all the windmills they stick up there.
Lol yeah maybe because that entire narrative was spun out of whole cloth, and nobody actually cares about having a wind or solar farm somewhat near to them…?
Wind turbines are noisy. You probably wouldn't mind them in view, but you don't want to live too close. The owners don't want you to live too close either: while it almost never happens, if a blade falls off and it only kills some corn or a cow people don't care too much, but if it destroys their house or kills a person they get mad.
I think it's kbin related but I still don't get how it happens, because I doubt this thumbnail came even from another WaPo article, as it's too fringe conspiracy bs & clickbaity. Honestly looks more like a YT video, especially with the black bars.
How did they define "near" and "in their community"?
There's a decent sized wind farm a few miles outside the town I live in and no one minds at all. If you tried to build that same wind farm right on the edge of town, or even inside it, I suspect the reaction would have been very different. A wind / solar farm 5 miles away is really NBD but one that's literally on the other side of your back fence may hit different.
Given how quiet solar farms are and how more appealing a windmill is vs smokestacks I'd say that even basically in your backyard isn't bad.
But I'd also like to know how they defined it here, or if they left it as asking people about it and leaving it up to each individual to use their idea of "near."