The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)

Using a case study of the Búrfell wind farm project, a large wind farm proposed in the Central Highlands of Iceland, the authors attempt to provide new insights into the factors shaping subjective landscape perceptions and attitudes to renewable energy developments, and into alternative methods that...

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Main Authors: Benediktsson, Karl, Bevk, Tadej, Hărmănescu, Mihaela, Van Veelen, Bregje, Frantál, Bohumil
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:Czech
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/169143
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spelling ftunivpraha:oai:https://dspace.cuni.cz:20.500.11956/169143 2024-01-28T10:06:39+01:00 The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland) Benediktsson, Karl Bevk, Tadej Hărmănescu, Mihaela Van Veelen, Bregje Frantál, Bohumil Island 2017 application/pdf application/octet-stream https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/169143 cs cze http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/169143 000224473 Příspěvek v časopisu 2017 ftunivpraha https://doi.org/20.500.11956/169143 2024-01-02T00:29:18Z Using a case study of the Búrfell wind farm project, a large wind farm proposed in the Central Highlands of Iceland, the authors attempt to provide new insights into the factors shaping subjective landscape perceptions and attitudes to renewable energy developments, and into alternative methods that may be used for their assessment. The research was based on an on-site visit and actual experience of the place, investigated using a combination of mental mapping, the technique of the semantic differential and a questionnaire survey. The results show that participants visiting a landscape and using all sensory organs in combination with mental mapping, can reveal more important information than using only ‘laboratory’ methods with static photographs. The results suggest that the perception of landscape is highly subjective. Those perceiving the landscape as more open, homogenous, industrial, unfamiliar and resilient also consider it more compatible with wind turbines. The perception of the landscape’s compatibility with wind turbines proved to be a dominant factor shaping attitudes towards the project. The acceptance of wind turbines is not, however, inconsistent with the perception of landscape as beautiful, wild and unique. Participants from more densely populated countries and countries with a developed wind energy industry were more tolerant of wind turbines in the Icelandic landscape. 234 247 Other/Unknown Material Iceland Charles University CU Digital repository Búrfell ENVELOPE(-19.818,-19.818,64.079,64.079)
institution Open Polar
collection Charles University CU Digital repository
op_collection_id ftunivpraha
language Czech
description Using a case study of the Búrfell wind farm project, a large wind farm proposed in the Central Highlands of Iceland, the authors attempt to provide new insights into the factors shaping subjective landscape perceptions and attitudes to renewable energy developments, and into alternative methods that may be used for their assessment. The research was based on an on-site visit and actual experience of the place, investigated using a combination of mental mapping, the technique of the semantic differential and a questionnaire survey. The results show that participants visiting a landscape and using all sensory organs in combination with mental mapping, can reveal more important information than using only ‘laboratory’ methods with static photographs. The results suggest that the perception of landscape is highly subjective. Those perceiving the landscape as more open, homogenous, industrial, unfamiliar and resilient also consider it more compatible with wind turbines. The perception of the landscape’s compatibility with wind turbines proved to be a dominant factor shaping attitudes towards the project. The acceptance of wind turbines is not, however, inconsistent with the perception of landscape as beautiful, wild and unique. Participants from more densely populated countries and countries with a developed wind energy industry were more tolerant of wind turbines in the Icelandic landscape. 234 247
format Other/Unknown Material
author Benediktsson, Karl
Bevk, Tadej
Hărmănescu, Mihaela
Van Veelen, Bregje
Frantál, Bohumil
spellingShingle Benediktsson, Karl
Bevk, Tadej
Hărmănescu, Mihaela
Van Veelen, Bregje
Frantál, Bohumil
The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)
author_facet Benediktsson, Karl
Bevk, Tadej
Hărmănescu, Mihaela
Van Veelen, Bregje
Frantál, Bohumil
author_sort Benediktsson, Karl
title The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)
title_short The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)
title_full The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)
title_fullStr The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)
title_full_unstemmed The importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the Búrfell wind farm (Iceland)
title_sort importance of on-site evaluation for placing renewable energy in the landscape :a case study of the búrfell wind farm (iceland)
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/169143
op_coverage Island
long_lat ENVELOPE(-19.818,-19.818,64.079,64.079)
geographic Búrfell
geographic_facet Búrfell
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/169143
000224473
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11956/169143
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