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Multi Level Environmental Governance – The Case of Wind Power Development in Sweden

Larsson, Stefan LU ; Emmelin, Lars and Vindelstam, Sandra (2014) In Societal Studies 6(2). p.291-312
Abstract
At national policy level in Sweden, the importance of development of wind power is emphasized. However, the actual implementation is highly dependent on local permit giving for windmills. The legislation governing the permit giving has been revised in an attempt to make the local processes faster and to shift the permit process towards a more regional environmental process as opposed to a more plan-based municipal process. By tradition in Sweden, the local, municipal level has had a strong mandate in land use planning which is often referred to as the “the municipal planning monopoly”, which means that there is a tension whenever a legal proposal seeks to diminish this “plan monopoly”. The legal investigation suggesting changes in the law... (More)
At national policy level in Sweden, the importance of development of wind power is emphasized. However, the actual implementation is highly dependent on local permit giving for windmills. The legislation governing the permit giving has been revised in an attempt to make the local processes faster and to shift the permit process towards a more regional environmental process as opposed to a more plan-based municipal process. By tradition in Sweden, the local, municipal level has had a strong mandate in land use planning which is often referred to as the “the municipal planning monopoly”, which means that there is a tension whenever a legal proposal seeks to diminish this “plan monopoly”. The legal investigation suggesting changes in the law on permit-giving stressed the need for strengthening the regional assessment, which led to a compromise called the “municipal veto-right”, where the regional environmental permit needs a formal approval from the municipality for the permit process to continue. This study investigates both the legal development of the so-called veto-right as well as what it empirically has led to, and how it is perceived by the industry as well as concerned parties. For this reason, a sample of 30 regional permit cases has been collected, and a limited number of interviews have been conducted with judges in appeal courts and regional handling officers assessing turbine applications. The results indicate that the industry sees the “veto” as leading to problematic uncertainty in the process at regional level and, therefore, prefer to keep the applications at a level that entitles them to use the municipal permit system which is determined by height and number of turbines. This is a consequence directly opposite to what the legal commission aimed for when revising the legal system. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
tiering, spatial planning, law, wind power, multi-level governance, municipal veto
in
Societal Studies
volume
6
issue
2
pages
291 - 312
publisher
Mykolas Romeris University
ISSN
2029-2236
project
Law and spatial planning: wind power and 3G infrastructure development
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
43254d1a-c5b2-45a4-860b-8e835fb4a1b2 (old id 4586576)
alternative location
https://www3.mruni.eu/ojs/societal-studies/article/view/3979
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:42:27
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:29:21
@article{43254d1a-c5b2-45a4-860b-8e835fb4a1b2,
  abstract     = {{At national policy level in Sweden, the importance of development of wind power is emphasized. However, the actual implementation is highly dependent on local permit giving for windmills. The legislation governing the permit giving has been revised in an attempt to make the local processes faster and to shift the permit process towards a more regional environmental process as opposed to a more plan-based municipal process. By tradition in Sweden, the local, municipal level has had a strong mandate in land use planning which is often referred to as the “the municipal planning monopoly”, which means that there is a tension whenever a legal proposal seeks to diminish this “plan monopoly”. The legal investigation suggesting changes in the law on permit-giving stressed the need for strengthening the regional assessment, which led to a compromise called the “municipal veto-right”, where the regional environmental permit needs a formal approval from the municipality for the permit process to continue. This study investigates both the legal development of the so-called veto-right as well as what it empirically has led to, and how it is perceived by the industry as well as concerned parties. For this reason, a sample of 30 regional permit cases has been collected, and a limited number of interviews have been conducted with judges in appeal courts and regional handling officers assessing turbine applications. The results indicate that the industry sees the “veto” as leading to problematic uncertainty in the process at regional level and, therefore, prefer to keep the applications at a level that entitles them to use the municipal permit system which is determined by height and number of turbines. This is a consequence directly opposite to what the legal commission aimed for when revising the legal system.}},
  author       = {{Larsson, Stefan and Emmelin, Lars and Vindelstam, Sandra}},
  issn         = {{2029-2236}},
  keywords     = {{tiering; spatial planning; law; wind power; multi-level governance; municipal veto}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{291--312}},
  publisher    = {{Mykolas Romeris University}},
  series       = {{Societal Studies}},
  title        = {{Multi Level Environmental Governance – The Case of Wind Power Development in Sweden}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4120588/4754787.pdf}},
  volume       = {{6}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}