Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:347Hits:19893552Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID181462
Title ProperIn search of wind farm sustainability on the Yucatan coast
Other Title InformationDeficiencies and public perception of Environmental Impact Assessment in Mexico
LanguageENG
AuthorZárate-Toledo, Ezequiel
Summary / Abstract (Note)Through the analysis of the corresponding Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for five wind projects set up on the Yucatan coast, in Mexico, this work seeks to draw attention to the environmental controversies that these projects generate. To carry out our analysis, we resorted to three sources of information that are part of the EIA process: (i) the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), presented by private companies, for these wind farms; (ii) observations and criticisms of the EIS, presented by the civil society during the public process to which the EIS is submitted; and (iii) the rulings emitted by the federal environmental authorities. This documentation was complemented by participation in a number of forums and some interviews. Based on this analysis, we defined a series of deficiencies in the EIA process. Accordingly, we can affirm that in Mexico, as in other countries, there is no wind energy plan capable of reconciling energy objectives with nature conservation. Renewable energy projects in Mexico have been designed solely based on the distribution of wind or solar resources, completely ignoring environmental or social issues. In this regard, a sustainable energy transition requires strengthening the environmental management capabilities of governments, and the application of mechanisms that will allow the integration of environmental variables in the early stages of decision making, using instruments such as the Strategic Environmental Assessment.
`In' analytical NoteEnergy Policy . No.158; Nov 2021: p.112525
Journal SourceEnergy Policy 2021-11 158
Key WordsRenewable Energy ;  Wind Farms ;  Environmental Policies