Wind Farms Drive Down House Prices

Published in Investing on 26 July 2012

... but is it our tax system that's to blame?

When a country improves its infrastructure, things such as roads, telecommunications networks and ports, in theory this should boost economic growth and improve the quality of life as long as the money isn't wasted on political vanity projects like Alaska's infamous "bridge to nowhere".

So a new railway station or motorway junction will usually boost the surrounding area because it attracts businesses, jobs, new residents and tourists. But some types of infrastructure, say a new power station, can also have a damaging impact upon the neighbourhood.

Last week the Valuation Office Agency, the organisation responsible for council tax assessments, said that wind farms are another type of infrastructure that come with a big negative after it ruled that giant wind turbines depress house prices in their vicinity.

Good for the country, bad for the locality

Britain nowadays has become a nation of NIMBYs because most people will only support a new development if it is Not In My Back Yard. But in many cases this is a perfectly sensible reaction. After all, who would want to live next door to a toxic waste incinerator?

NIMBYism is particularly common where a proposed development should produce benefits that are widely distributed throughout Britain but it also inflicts a substantial detriment upon the local community. Wind farms are the latest example.

25% off thanks to wind turbines

Wind turbines generate power for the country, at least when the wind is blowing, but they've taken a lot of flak because they decimate local birdlife and the energy that they produce is very expensive. You can now add house prices to this list as the Valuation Office Agency recently moved several houses into lower council tax bands purely on the grounds that they were situated close to wind farms. The value of one house fell by 25%.

This is despite many years of official statements that wind turbines do not affect house prices. The same thing used to be said about National Grid's (LSE: NG) high-voltage overhead power lines, but property prices fall as you come close to them, and if there is any uncertainty about the route for a new power line, people stop buying houses there.

Infrastructure can be critical

When someone is planning a new project, they should consider whether the existing local infrastructure is up to the job. The Canadian property company Olympia & York found this out the hard way when it redeveloped Canary Wharf in the 1980s. There wasn't much demand for its buildings because the area (London's Docklands) was very poorly served by public transport at the time.

As a result, Olympia & York collapsed in the early 1990s. Several years later Canary Wharf was one of the fastest growing parts of London, with the trigger being the completion of extensions to both the Docklands Light railway and the Jubilee Line.

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Getting companies to build for the council

Local politicians know that if a major supermarket chain wants to build a new store in their district, they can extract concessions from it as a quid pro quo for granting planning permission. Usually this involves getting the supermarket to pay for some local infrastructure projects, which eases the pressure on the budget and impresses the voters.

This cuts both ways. If Tesco (LSE: TSCO) wants to build a new supermarket, when the council gets it to improve the local road network this will make it easier for people to get to the new store. The other stuff that the council wants is part of the cost of doing business.

The state school education that costs money

It's well known that a good state school adds tens of thousands of pounds to house prices in its catchment area. That's because many parents will pay a premium, which is almost £92,000 in the case of Britain's top 100 primary schools, in order for their children to go there. Those who can't pay, or won't pay, generally don't get access to the better schools.

But when a local education authority starts to use admission lotteries to determine places at oversubscribed schools, this depresses house prices in some areas. That's because if owning a local house no longer guarantees a place in a good school then the premium will lose some of its value.

If our tax system was more like America's where a greater proportion of the taxes that are raised locally are also spent locally, rather than being sent to central government, there would be a lot more enthusiasm for new developments and fewer NIMBYs.

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Further investment opportunities:

> Tony owns shares in National Grid but he doesn't own shares in any of the other companies mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool owns shares in Tesco.

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Comments

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dhorsley 27 Jul 2012 , 9:44am

So where is your evidence that wind farms decimate local birdlife. I'm surrounded by wind turbines, a community owned Enercon within 800m, three more commercial Enercons within a couple of kms (the Enercons are ~1mW each) and a smaller 11kW Gaia on a friends farm. I've not seen any sign of birds killed around any of them and I'm at the farm regularly.

TonyTwoTimes 27 Jul 2012 , 11:30am

Hi dhorsley,

There are a lot of stories about wind turbines killing birds, especially in Canada (and especially rare birds of prey).

Here's one from the UK where it got so bad at a primary school that the staff were coming in early to remove the corpses so that the children didn't see them.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/energy/7870929/Primary-school-forced-to-turn-off-wind-turbine-after-bird-deaths.html

Here's one from the States about the problems caused by situating wind turbines along migration routes.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23389384/ns/us_news-environment/t/wind-turbines-may-threaten-whooping-cranes/#.UBJtUKDNnm0

Cheers,

TonyL (the author)

dhorsley 30 Jul 2012 , 11:08am

The second one is only a possibilty - no evidence that there have actually been problems just highlighting that siting turbines on the migratory route of rare birds could cause problems - in the UK that would almost certainly cause th planners to block the application.

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