NIMBY

What is NIMBY?

Educational content

September 15, 2025

5 min read

Learn more about what NIMBYism is, what it stands for, and why it matters in the renewable industry development.

Beyond technological and survival evolution, the shift to renewable energy – solar, wind, batteries, and green hydrogen – is also a land-use revolution. That’s why, across the globe, energy developers are facing a rising tide of local resistance known as NIMBYism. 

While the public overwhelmingly supports clean energy, many people object when renewable infrastructure is proposed near their homes or communities. But NIMBYism isn’t just obstructionism – it often reflects real concerns about aesthetics, equity, trust, and local impact.  

Understanding what NIMBY means in the context of renewables, why it’s growing, and how to address it is essential to accelerating a just and successful energy transition. 

What is NIMBY?

NIMBY stands for “Not In My Back Yard. It’s a term used to describe when people support a project or idea in principle, such as renewable energy, affordable housing, or infrastructure, but oppose it being built near where they live.  

Where does NIMBY come from?

While NIMBY attitudes have existed long before, the term “NIMBY” gained traction in the 1980s, particularly in media and urban planning circles in the U.S. and U.K. One of the earliest reported uses appeared in a Virginia newspaper in June 1980, in reference to local opposition to a proposed nuclear waste disposal site in their “backyard.” 

What does NIMBY mean in renewable energy?

Even though NIMBY is not exclusive to the renewable energy industry, NIMBYism remains one of the biggest non-technical barriers to renewable energy deployment. NIMBY in renewables includes opposition to building: 

Icon representing wind turbines as a renewable energy source related to SCADA systems

Utility-scale wind turbines (onshore and offshore)

Icon representing solar panels as a renewable energy source related to SCADA systems

Solar farms

Icon symbolizing renewable energy sources like wind, BESS, and solar power related to SCADA systems

Battery energy storage systems (BESS)

Icon showing power distribution related to SCADA systems

High-voltage transmission lines and substations

Why do people oppose renewable development?

Opposition to renewable energy projects varies in its reasoning, but NIMBY concerns often center on the potential impacts of such developments. Common issues include: 

  • Visual pollution, like tall wind turbines or blinking aviation lights, that alter landscapes and feel out of place to individuals. 
  • Noise pollution, particularly from wind turbines that generate low-level noise. 
  • Environmental impacts, such as effects on wildlife, land use, and water resources. 
  • Potential decline in property values
     
In many cases, NIMBY opposition is also fueled by a deep distrust of developers or policymakers, especially when communities feel excluded from decision-making processes. 

Did you know?

NIMBYism even varies across different types of renewable energy infrastructure. People are often more resistant to the installation of wind turbines or high-voltage transmission lines near their homes, while they tend to be more accepting of solar panels.

This difference largely stems from the different degree of visual impact and perceived disruption associated with each technology. 

What are the real effects of NIMBY on renewables?

In some cases, NIMBYism leads to delays – in others, it blocks projects entirely. For example, in New York, over 78 clean energy projects have been canceled or frozen due to local pushback (NY Post). In the UK, opposition to wind and solar has become a political flashpoint, even drawing national headlines (The Guardian).  

Why does NIMBYism matter in the energy transition?

The International Energy Agency (IEA) says that renewable energy deployment must triple by 2030 to keep climate goals within reach. But land-use disputes are slowing that progress in many countries. NIMBYism has become one of the most significant soft barriers to renewable deployment, with ripple effects that include: 

Planning gridlock

Local planning permissions often take years, or are appealed in court 

Higher costs

Legal delays, public relations efforts, and design changes raise capital expenditures 

Unreliable deployment timelines

Delays disrupt national and corporate decarbonization targets 

Siting fatigue

After fighting one project, communities may oppose all future ones by default

The issue is also global. In Germany and Canada, rural communities have passed referenda or zoning rules that effectively block large solar and wind farms. In the U.S., over 200 counties have adopted restrictions on renewable projects in the past decade (Solar Power World). 

How can we go from NIMBY to PIMBY?

Instead of NIMBY, we want more PIMBY, which stands for Please In My Backyard. So, to go from NIMBY to PIMBY, some renewable developers are tackling opposition by moving from reactive defense to proactive community engagement, using a variety of strategies 

1

Early and inclusive community engagement

Open houses, listening sessions, and shared planning tools can build trust long before permits are filed. Developers who start with transparency often face far less pushback (The Conversation). A pro tip for this is that engagement should happen in the pre-development stage, not just after site selection. 

2

Community co-ownership and benefit-sharing

In Denmark, legislation requires wind developers to offer 20% ownership to local citizens (State of Green). In Canada, Indigenous-led renewable projects like the Mesgi’g Ugju’s’n wind farm have shown how co-ownership models foster lasting local support (Energy Transition). 

3

Local hiring and supplier sourcing

Tying renewable projects to job creation, vocational training, and local subcontracting helps communities see direct value. U.S. solar developers often partner with EPCs to support local economies (Solar Power World). 

4

Tailored messaging

General climate messaging may not resonate. Developers are more effective when they address specific local concernslike wildlife corridors, visual screening, or tax revenue for schools (Bob Lynn Medium). 

5

Government policy tools

Governments can ease tensions by offering community benefit funds, energy bill discounts for host regions, or faster permitting for projects with proven local support. These are only a few of the possible ways in which the public sector can tackle NIMBYism. 

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