The Tehachapi Mountain Range is home to around 4,731 wind turbines that generate about 3,200 megawatts of energy. City of Tehachapi

Buried in the mountains of southern California lies a field of white. It's not your typical farm: It produces renewable energy. The Tehachapi Pass is home to one of the largest wind farms in the world. Now a huge tech company is bringing more turbines to the area, and it is going to have an impact on a nearby community. In April, Amazon announced three new wind farm projects — two overseas, and one in the Tehachapi (teh-HATCH-ah-pee) Mountains, located in southern California. The farms will help contribute to Amazon's goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2040 and 100% renewables by 2030. The mountain range is a hub for the wind industry, with around 4,731 turbines that produce about 3,200 megawatts of electricity along the mountain range, according to the Center for Land Use Interpretation, with private companies flocking to the area because of the high wind speeds. Farther north is the Altamont Pass wind farm, which helps power another tech giant: Alphabet's Google. Located just northeast of the mountain range is the town of Tehachapi. With a population of about 12,000, Tehachapi Mayor Pro-Tem Phil Smith called it a nice little mountain town, and while the power being produced from wind only comes to the town indirectly through the grid, Tehachapi gets something else directly as a result of the big renewable energy investments. "The good news for us is obviously we have the economic impact," said Tehachapi economic development coordinator Corey Costelloe. Outside contractors come in to work on the wind turbines, staying in the town's hotels and eating at its restaurants, like Kohnen's Country Bakery, one of the town's more popular local eateries. Family owned by Colleen and Thomas Kohnen, the bakery has been around since 2004. Colleen says the bakery is growing, but it's hard to tell how much of that is because of the wind industry. Though she says that she does get customers who come from out of the city to work on the windmills. "I had one guy come in last week, and I guess he was staying in a hotel during the week or something," Khonen said. "And his wife and daughter came up to visit him. That just introduces people (to the bakery)." Stephen Abbott, city renewables accelerator manager at Rocky Mountain Institute, says that small businesses seeing an increase in revenue is part of the initial economic boom that follows a renewable energy farm.

Keeping jobs local

According to estimates from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the construction of a 47 megawatt (the size of Amazon's new farm) renewable energy farm could produce around 50 new jobs. One company wants to keep those jobs in Tehachapi. World Wind and Solar is a renewable energy maintenance company that moved its headquarters to Tehachapi in 2019. WWS CEO Buddy Cummings has deep ties to Tehachapi. His father, Steve Cummings, installed some of the first wind turbines in the town. Cummings feels moving the company to Tehachapi is a homecoming of sorts. "The relationships that got us into the renewables market are the relationships we grew up with," Cummings said. "Tehachapi just feels like home." WWS has a goal of keeping their work local. Cummings says that he tries to hire Tehachapi residents, and use word of mouth marketing. "We grow by people telling their friends and family," Cummings said. The company, which started in wind but has diversified into solar, requires workers to do general labor maintaining solar panels — cleaning and upkeep. The company hires workers to do that work for 60 to 90 days, and if they perform well, the company brings them back to Tehachapi for two to three weeks of training, teaching them how to do more technical maintenance on wind turbines and solar arrays. After the training they can become full-time technicians. "It's a quick and healthy way to get people work," Cummings said. "It has such an opportunity to grow a career so fast." The workers coming in to train are spending their dollars at local businesses, like Kohnen's Bakery, which cited the World Wind and Solar training period as a profitable time because the renewable energy company recommends it to trainees. "The wind farms have generated quite a number of very good technical, good-paying jobs that can sustain a family and the employers have benefits," Mayor Pro-Tem Smith said. "So the people in the workforce can look forward to actually a career in the industry if they want, and the pay is good enough where they can afford a home and stay here." Wind turbine technicians are making just over $54,000 a year ($26.14 per hour), according to The Bureau of Labor Statistics. It forecast employment growth of 57% for wind turbine technicians from 2018 to 2028. In 2018, there were 6,600 wind turbine technician jobs in the U.S., according to BLS data.

Tehachapi isn't the only area that has seen an economic updraft from the wind industry. Benton County, Indiana (pop. 8,700) has multiple wind projects developed over the past decade, one operated by Pattern Energy which supports electricity needs for an Amazon Web Services data center. The AWS farm, its first major renewables project, went into operation in early 2016, and Paul Jackson, director of economic development for Benton County says the area has seen gradual growth after big, initial booms from its wind farm projects. "Everything kind of flattens out," Jackson said. "The big boom is over, and you get into the reality of it." The Amazon Wind Farm Fowler Ridge project is expected to make $5 million in economic development payments to Benton County over a period of 17 years. The project is entitled to 100% property tax abatements for a 10-year period, after which property tax revenue for the county will start being generated as well. "Once wind farms came off of abatement, we are getting tax dollars. The tax money is fantastic," Jackson said. Between 2008 and 2018, taxes on Benton County wind farms have permitted the county to allocate an additional $3 million to schools, additional money to medical services, $35 million to new roads — upgraded roads were required to transport giant wind turbines to sites — and a total of $31 million in economic development payments to be made to the county through 2038. A September article from the Wall Street Journal highlighted that farmers in the U.S. are leasing land out for renewable energy farms to help themselves in a difficult financial time. "I think one thing we shouldn't lose sight of is that a lot of farmers in the middle of the country are relatively strapped economically," Abbott said. "Wind or solar can be a really useful additional revenue stream for people and those communities, particularly if it helps them get through a particular commodity down cycle."

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