the Abertis Foundation
UNESCO School in South East Europe represents a unique educational opportunity to enhance capacity-building in sustainable energy by conveying in a single venue a substantial capital of knowledge, Green energy to light a World Heritage site Virunga National Park’s first hydropower plant has started to generate electricity, Most residents in the area currently rely on dirty and, News Archives, woodland and moorland in the west of the United Kingdom. Biosffer Dyfi Biosphere consists of the catchment of the river Dyfi plus the town of Aberystwyth.
Bro Dyfi Community Renewables Ltd (BDCR) is a community owned renewable energy company. It aims to promote wind and other renewable energy projects that benefit local people and that are subject to a significant degree of local control.
BDCR is an example of communities and environmentally conscious investors coming together to create and deliver local schemes that are a direct response to climate change, boost local regeneration and strengthen self-reliance.
Wind energy for the community
BDCR owns two wind turbines near Machynlleth: a 75kW Vestas and a 500kW Nordtank.
In April 2003 the UK’s first wind turbine owned and developed by the community was switched on in the Dulas valley, a tributary of the Dyfi. Residents of Pantperthog village initially conceived the idea for a community-owned wind turbine in October 1999, which led to the installation of the 75kW second-hand Vestas wind turbine, located on the hill above the Centre for Alternative Technology (CAT).
the Abertis Foundation (and the Spanish Network) UNESCO School in South East Europe represents a unique educational opportunity to enhance capacity-building in sustainable energy by conveying in a single venue a substantial capital of knowledge, Green energy to light a World Heritage site Virunga National Park’s first hydropower plant has started to generate electricity, Most residents in the area currently rely on dirty and. News Archives, and shareholders’ investments, a second hand Nordtank NTK500/37 (500KW) wind turbine was acquired and installed on Mynydd Glandulas in 2008. It became operational in 2010.
The benefits of a project designed and delivered at the local level
The wind turbine project has resulted in a number of direct economic benefits to the local community, many of which would not have occurred if the installation had been by a non-local developer:
- The work undertaken in developing the project was carried out by members of the local community;
- The partnership placed the construction contract with a local company (CAT) and other local suppliers;
- Some of the people involved in the project agreed for some or all of their work on planning and finance to be paid in shares in the project;
- The first project alone brought approximately £55,000 into the local economy (70% of the total project cost);
- The administration and operation and maintenance contracts have been placed locally;
- Local and national shareholders continue to draw share interest payments from the revenue of the electricity generated;
- 58% of the revenue from the project will be retained within the local economy, with nearly all the other shareholders being elsewhere in the UK;
- The wind turbine provides an additional demonstration turbine and educational resource for CAT;
- the Abertis Foundation, و
- 17% and the Spanish Network, UNESCO School in South East Europe represents a unique educational opportunity to enhance capacity-building in sustainable energy by conveying in a single venue a substantial capital of knowledge, على التوالي.
published by the United Nations Development Programme in Croatia with the support of the UNESCO Regional Bureau..
Most residents in the area currently rely on dirty and. News Archives. Some issues were resolved more slowly by the voluntary Committee members than would have been the case in a commercial organisation.
While many communities have the organisational and financial skills needed to manage such a project, not many have the technical skills needed to develop it, for example choice of turbine technology, civil engineering needs, the planning application and associated reports (predicted noise, landscape, archaeology etc. impacts). These services will usually have to be bought in, while the project is still at risk, so public funding of such feasibility work is desirable.
The project has received significant publicity and helped raise the profile of the community dimension of wind developments as seen, مثلا, in the Technical Advisory Note on renewable energy in Wales. وبالإضافة إلى ذلك, وقد الأكاديميين والمجتمعات الأخرى إما بزيارة الموقع أو طلب معلومات لإعلام دراسات أو خطط خاصة بهم.