GLOBE-Net, October 11, 2012 - A new OECD
report shows that producing renewable energy can stimulate
rural economies when linked to local industries that already
exist.
Using case studies assessing 16 regions in Europe, Canada and
United States, the OECD report - Linking Renewable Energy to Rural
Development - found that renewable energy (RE)
deployment can provide hosting communities with some benefits,
including:
New revenue
sources: Increasing the tax base for improving
service provision in rural communities, RE investments can also
generate extra income for land owners and land-based activities,
such as farmers and forest owners who integrate renewable energy
production into their activities greatly diversifying their income
sources.
New job and business
opportunities: especially when a large number of actors is
involved and when the RE activity is embedded in the local economy.
Although RE tends to have a limited impact on local labour markets,
it can create some valuable job opportunities for people in regions
where there are otherwise limited employment
opportunities.
Innovations in products,
practices and policies in rural areas: In hosting RE,
rural areas are the places where new technologies are tested,
challenges first appear, and new policy approaches are trialed.
Small and medium-sized enterprises are active in finding business
niches as well as clients and valuable suppliers. Even when the
basic technology is imported from outside the region, local actors
often adapt it to local needs and potentials.
Capacity building and
community empowerment: As actors become more specialised
and accumulate skills in the new industry, their capacity to learn
and innovate is enhanced. This dynamic has been observed both in
regions where local communities fully support RE and in regions
where the population is against potentially harmful
developments.
Affordable
energy: RE provides remote rural regions with the
opportunity to produce their own energy (electricity and heat in
particular), rather than importing conventional energy from
outside. Being able to generate reliable and cheap energy can
trigger economic development.
The OECD research findings
parallel conclusions reached by GLOBE Advisors in its
analysis of clean energy business workforce opportunities
for rural British Columbia communities earlier this
year. Many rural BC communities linked to
industries such as forestry are optimally positioned to take on
bioenergy-related opportunities due to the many transferable
skills, training, and business support services
that are readily available. . Click here to download full
report.
The OECD report cautions that producing wind, sun and
biomass energy does increase rural tax bases and services,
encourages local skills and innovation, and creates cheap energy,
but regions should not neglect their traditional sources of jobs
and growth.
The global deployment of renewable
energy has been expanding rapidly. For instance, the RE
electricity sector grew by 26% between 2005 and 2010 globally and
currently provides about 20% of the world's total power ( including
hydro-power). OECD
For example, as most long-term employment related to renewable
energy goes to international researchers and manufacturers, regions
should ensure that renewable energy production does not have a
negative impact on their more lucrative, and job-rich, sectors such
as tourism.
Similarly, farmers and forest owners should see green energy as
a way to diversify and augment their incomes, but not the sole
source.
The OECD research also warns against
high, long-term, renewable energy subsidies which drive up the cost
of energy, encourage unnecessary destruction of farms and forests,
and attract investors who will abandon their projects as soon as
the levels come down.
Key challenges:
The report stresses that renewable energy policy is expected to
deliver in three areas: energy security, climate change mitigation,
and economic development (job creation). However, this is not
always the case and there can be significant trade-offs among
them.
For instance, large biomass heat and power plants can
generate new employment opportunities in rural communities, but may
have a negative CO2 balance due to land-use change and
transportation of feedstock over relatively long distances.
Similarly RE is in most instances a capital-intensive
activity, and energy as a whole represents a small share of
employment in regional economies. Small-scale installations
typically source labour and equipment from international suppliers,
so the impact at the community level in terms of job creation
is rather limited.
In October, 2012 GLOBE Advisors
published the findings of research undertaken in British Columbia
which showed many innovative companies such as COW Power, which is
supporting BC farmers turn manure and food waste into clean
renewable electricity and providing them with additional revenue
streams. Click here to read more about GLOBE's BC Clean
Economy Market Insight Study.
The OECD case studies are: Puglia and Abruzzo in Italy;
Extremadura in Spain; Tromso in Sweden; Regions Sjaelland in
Denmark; North Karelia in Finland; Mellestra Norland in Sweden;
Scotland; Fryslân in the Netherlands; Québec and Prince Edward
Island in Canada; Iowa, Oregon, Maine, Vermont and Tennessee in the
United States.
An Executive Summary of the OECD Report is available here