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Bidding against the wind: A choice experiment in green energy, green jobs and offshore views in North Carolina, USA

Authors

Lee C. Parton, Daniel J. Phaneuf, Laura O. Taylor, Sanja Lutzeyer

Abstract

Offshore wind development is in its nascent stages in the United States. Recent research indicates that the visual impacts of offshore wind farms are viewed negatively by the general population. This North Carolina application is the first US-focused discrete choice experiment that explicitly asks respondents to consider the positive local and global benefits from offshore wind development, such as job creation and greenhouse gas emission reductions, simultaneously with their visual impacts. We find significant willingness to pay (WTP) for reducing the visual impacts of offshore wind farms, and that the extent of disamenity varies in the population and with placement along developed tourist towns (as much as $783/year for three years) or preserved coastlines (as much as $451/year for three years). We also find that some preference classes value projects that create permanent jobs and reduce carbon emissions. We use our estimates of preferences for the positive and negative attributes to explore specific wind farm configurations and locations that could achieve positive consensus in a heterogenous population.

Read “Bidding against the wind: A choice experiment in green energy, green jobs and offshore views in North Carolina, USA” in the Journal of Environmental Management, Volume 351, February 2024