As municipal elections approach, mayors are central to renewable energy projects despite local opposition. In La Celle-Saint-Cyr, the mayoral candidate skips public meetings to avoid anti-wind turbine debates. These efforts aim to reduce reliance on imported fossil fuels.
Local elected officials in France are pivotal in the energy transition, especially ahead of municipal elections. Unlike the centralized nuclear fleet, renewable energy projects such as wind turbines, solar farms, heat networks, or methanizers are deployed at the territorial level, spread across the country.
In La Celle-Saint-Cyr, a commune of 840 residents in the Yonne department, independent mayor Marie-Hélène Gouedard, running for re-election, has chosen not to hold public meetings. “It would turn into something purely anti-wind,” she explains, lamenting the divisiveness. A project for three wind turbines was launched in 2015 on communal land. A local association formed to oppose it, and a legal challenge is ongoing. “Since then, it’s been war in the village,” the mayor summarizes.
While mayors are not always the initiators of these major projects, they serve as the primary contacts to enable them. These initiatives promote energy sovereignty by gradually replacing imported oil and gas. Yet, they often spark local tensions, placing officials at the heart of the conflicts.