TY - THES TI - Bringing climate change home to meet your community: stakeholder perceptions of offshore wind energy in Humboldt County, California AU - Emery, C AB - As impacts from anthropogenic climate change continue to manifest at global and local scales, communities are increasingly seeking solutions to transition the world away from fossil fuels. Novel renewable energy technologies, including offshore floating wind energy, continue to garner developer interest. Technological success, however, is one small piece in the effort to decarbonize. Project developers are required to engage in political and bureaucratic processes and work with communities where projects may be sited. Balancing community perceptions and needs, as well as permitting and leasing processes, with increasing pressure to decarbonize will be key as the fight against climate change continues. This research explores stakeholder perceptions of proposed offshore wind energy development as they relate to the development process and climate change in Humboldt County, California. I utilized semi-structured interviews, procedural analysis, and participant observations to identify the ways in which stakeholders balance their general support of renewable energy and concern for climate change with the impacts and ‘unknowns’ of localized development. I find that stakeholders weigh numerous concerns when considering offshore wind development in Humboldt County, and climate change is not the most salient factor in the discussion. Indeed, stakeholders themselves are unsure how to balance impacts from climate change with impacts from project development, much less where their respective communities fit in that discussion. DA - 2020/05// PY - 2020 SP - 367 PB - Humboldt State University UR - https://digitalcommons.humboldt.edu/etd/367/ LA - English M3 - Master's Thesis KW - Wind Energy KW - Floating Offshore Wind KW - Human Dimensions KW - Climate Change KW - Stakeholder Engagement ER -