Abstract

A transition toward decentralized and land-intensive renewable energy production systems is one among many factors re-shaping rural areas, leading to reimaginations and contestations. Especially in the Global North, the rural narrative now includes not just rural ‘production’ but also the ‘consumption’ of rural amenity and experience. Previous research into public attitudes toward renewable energy correlates the former with positive attitudes to renewable energy, and the latter with negative attitudes toward renewable energy. Territorial structures, such as official land-use plans, reflect dominant discourses and narratives that shape ongoing rural transformation. The purpose of this work is to understand the extent to which, if at all, those correlations at the individual level between landscape conceptualizations and sentiment toward renewable energy are manifest in territorial structures. In what ways are energy transitions present in rural land-use plans and planning systems? Is there a relationship between how rural landscapes are conceptualized and how energy transitions are framed and addressed, in land-use planning systems? These questions are answered through a structured content and discourse analysis of 10 land-use plans of rural municipalities in southern Ontario; an agriculturally intensive region that hosts much of Ontario’s large-scale renewable energy systems. Correlations observed between landscape conceptualizations and sentiment toward renewable energy observed are not strongly reflected in land-use plans. Land-use plans in this region are not positioned to manage the place-based opportunities and impacts associated with renewable energy development. The research reveals an opportunity for rural land-use planning systems to more explicitly incorporate energy transitions in their evolving discourses, identities and development trajectories.

Highlights

  • Prospecting for renewable energy (RE) resources, as with other natural resources, is predominantly a rural affair

  • In only one municipality – Niagara –we find a separate section of the Official Plan’ (OP) dedicated to RE infrastructure, and it focuses exclusively on controls over wind turbine development

  • This expectation is based on the understanding that the orientation of landscape use in rural communities is linked to pathways of economic transformations: rural economies pursuing productive landscape transformation rely on the landscape itself as a productive resource to harvest or extract commodities, RE technologies being another in a long line of productive activities

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Summary

Introduction

Prospecting for renewable energy (RE) resources, as with other natural resources, is predominantly a rural affair. The technologies at the forefront of the transition toward RE resources are decentralized, area-dependent and land-intensive. Rural spaces and places are being contested and (re)imagined – materially and discursively – irrespective of the RE transition, through ongoing processes of economic, social, political, environmental and technological change. Such processes of rural change, together with longstanding place-based narratives and local histories, provide both a conceptual and pragmatic context within which the prospect and process of energy transition must be viewed (Beckley, 2017; Huber and McCarthy, 2017; McCarthy, 2015; Naumann and Rudolph, 2020)

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