Guide · Renewable energy

Approval planning for a wind farm: procedure and requirements

Which procedure wind energy installations go through, what assessments are required and why early planning determines success.

Wind energy installations go through a demanding procedure under immission-control law. Anyone who knows it and sets up the necessary assessments early significantly shortens the approval.

The procedure at a glance

Wind energy installations above a certain height are, as a rule, authorised in the immission-control procedure under the Federal Immission Control Act (BImSchG). This procedure bundles numerous individual aspects into one approval and is correspondingly extensive.

Approval planning prepares this procedure: it compiles the application documents, coordinates the required assessments and accompanies the consultation with authorities and public agencies.

The required assessments

The greater part of the effort consists of the specialist assessments. Typical ones include:

The species-protection investigations in particular are time-critical because they are tied to the seasons. Anyone who commissions them too late easily loses a whole year.

The approval planning process

Check the locationAvailability of land, distances, preliminary check of the ability to obtain approval.
Commission assessmentsStart season-bound investigations early, coordinate the remaining assessments.
Prepare the applicationDraw up complete application documents for the BImSchG procedure.
Accompany the procedureInvolvement of authorities and the public, answer conditions, obtain the approval.

Why early planning is decisive

With a wind farm the schedule is decided almost entirely in the early phase. Season-bound assessments, the availability of land and the consultation with the approval authority determine the earliest point at which the project can be approved.

Experienced approval planning recognises risks such as species protection or distance rules early and decides whether a location is viable before much money flows into detailed planning. This protects against costly dead ends.

The most common mistake is to begin the detailed planning before the approval-critical questions are clarified. An honest preliminary check at the start is the best investment in the schedule.

Land, distances and acceptance

Besides the assessments, the land determines the project. Availability, ownership and designation as a wind-priority or suitability area are often the first hurdles, long before technology is at issue.

Added to this are distance rules to residential development, which vary from state to state and can severely limit the possible location. Anyone who does not check these rules early risks, in the end, not being allowed to build on a technically ideal location after all.

A third factor is local acceptance. Wind projects are regularly the subject of public debate, and objections in the procedure can considerably lengthen the schedule. Early, transparent communication with the municipality and residents pays off.

These factors cannot be remedied after the fact. They belong in the very first assessment of a location, together with the season-bound assessments and the grid connection.

A wind farm rarely fails on the technology and often on land, distance or acceptance. These very questions therefore belong at the start of the approval planning.

Häufige Fragen

Which procedure do wind energy installations go through?

As a rule the immission-control procedure under the Federal Immission Control Act (BImSchG), which bundles many individual aspects into one approval.

What assessments are required?

Among others noise and shadow-flicker assessments as well as species-protection investigations, plus others depending on the location. The species-protection assessments are season-bound and time-critical.

Why is early planning so important?

Because season-bound assessments and approval-critical questions determine the schedule. An early preliminary check prevents costly dead ends.

Edoé Lassey, Bauüberwacher

Edoé Lassey

Bauüberwacher · Geschäftsführer

Edoé Lassey führt die LND Ingenieure GmbH als Bauüberwacher und Ingenieur für Infrastruktur- und Tiefbau. Die zertifizierten Rollen Technischer Berechtigter, Sicherungsüberwacher, Schaltantragsteller und Bauvorlageberechtigung gehören zum Leistungskern.

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