Scotland’s community owned wind farms have provided, on average, 34 times more benefit payments to local communities than privately owned wind farms, a recent report has highlighted.
The report, produced by Aquatera, on behalf of Point and Sandwick Development Trust, compared nine community owned and four private wind farms in Scotland and found that returns from the community owned wind farms average £170,000 per installed MW a year, far exceeding the community benefit payment industry standard of £5000 per installed MW per annum.
Community Energy Scotland CEO Janet Foggie said: “This valuable study confirms what our sector has long-known; that the benefits from community energy vastly exceed those from privately-owned generation.
“The report reaffirms the importance of communities retaining control and ownership of renewable energy, to maximise the benefits to local people.
“I believe the same principles will apply to other areas that community groups are now engaging in, such as energy storage, EV car clubs and flexibility provision.
“This report shows renewable community energy is a vital part of our journey to an equal and fair Net Zero.”
Community benefit payments have become well established in commercial wind farm development in the UK and have progressed over the last 30 years to a rate of £5000 per installed MW per annum (a rate which has been adopted by the Scottish Government in their guidance on community benefits within the onshore renewable energy sector).
Unlike private wind farms, community-owned wind farms’ monetary contributions are based on the turbine’s financial performance instead of a set yearly stipend. For the purposes of the report Aquatera analysed the figures to get a £ per MW per annum basis.
One case study within the report showed that a 900kW community-owned turbine on the Orkney island of Westray has returned to the community approximately £299,057 per MW per annum and is expected to contribute £6.8m to the community over its 25-year lifespan.
Norman Mackenzie, chairman of Point and Sandwick Trust, which owns the UK’s largest community wind farm, said: “We are very pleased to have been able to contribute to this ground-breaking research into the tremendous economic impact of community energy.
“We are just one of a number of community wind farms in the Western Isles which together represent over £30m of capital investment and which is returning a net income of £2m a year into good causes in the local economy.
“Community energy punches way above its weight in financial and economic terms and if governments really want to ‘level-up’ and to spread the benefits of the green economy to all parts of the country, then they need to make community energy a central pillar of their climate policy and not just a ‘nice-to-have’.”


