US Dept of Energy Berkeley Lab Study Finds No Widespread Impact of Wind Power Projects on Surrounding Residential Property Values in the U.S.
12/2/2009 9:48:32 AM
(Article Source:
http://newscenter.lbl.gov/press-releases/2009/12/02/wind-power-property-values/)
Over 30,000 megawatts of wind energy capacity are installed across the
United States and an increasing number of communities are considering new wind
power facilities. Given these developments, there is an urgent need to
empirically investigate typical community concerns about wind energy and thereby
provide stakeholders involved in the wind project siting process a common base
of knowledge. A major new report released today by the U.S. Department of
Energy’s (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory evaluates one of those
concerns, and finds that proximity to wind energy facilities does not have a
pervasive or widespread adverse effect on the property values of nearby homes.
The new report, funded by the DOE, is based on site visits, data
collection, and analysis of almost 7,500 single-family home sales, making it the
most comprehensive and data-rich analysis to date on the potential impact of
U.S. wind projects on residential property values.
“Neither the view of
wind energy facilities nor the distance of the home to those facilities was
found to have any consistent, measurable, and significant effect on the selling
prices of nearby homes,” says report author Ben Hoen, a consultant to Berkeley
Lab. “No matter how we looked at the data, the same result kept coming back - no
evidence of widespread impacts.”
The team of researchers for the
project collected data on homes situated within 10 miles of 24 existing wind
facilities in nine different U.S. states; the closest home was 800 feet from a
wind facility. Each home in the sample was visited to collect important on-site
information such as whether wind turbines were visible from the home. The home
sales used in the study occurred between 1996 and 2007, spanning the period
prior to the announcement of each wind energy facility to well after its
construction and full-scale operation.
The conclusions of the study are
drawn from eight different hedonic pricing models, as well as repeat sales and
sales volume models. A hedonic model is a statistical analysis method used to
estimate the impact of house characteristics on sales prices. None of the models
uncovered conclusive statistical evidence of the existence of any widespread
property value effects that might be present in communities surrounding wind
energy facilities.
“It took three years to collect all of the data and
analyze more than 50 different statistical model specifications,” says co-author
and project manager Ryan Wiser of Berkeley Lab, “but without that amount of
effort, we would not have been confident we were giving stakeholders the best
information possible.”
“Though the analysis cannot dismiss the
possibility that individual homes or small numbers of homes have been negatively
impacted, it finds that if these impacts do exist, their frequency is too small
to result in any widespread, statistically observable impact,” he added.
The analysis revealed that home sales prices are very sensitive to the
overall quality of the scenic vista from a property, but that a view of a wind
energy facility did not demonstrably impact sales prices. The Berkeley Lab
researchers also did not find statistically observable differences in prices for
homes located closer to wind facilities than those located further away, or for
homes that sold after the announcement or construction of a wind energy facility
when compared to those selling prior to announcement. Even for those homes
located within a one-mile distance of a wind project, the researchers found no
persuasive evidence of a property value impact.