As of: February 3, 2024, 8:30 a.m
By: Volker Camehn
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According to the mayor, three wind turbines on Brunnthaler Flur would be conceivable.
© Nicolas Armer
Brunnthal is planning its own wind power subsidiary.
Negotiations with the Bavarian State Forests are scheduled to take place this month.
Brunnthal
- The lease agreement for the three wind turbines in Hofoldinger Forst has just been finalized, the crowdfunding campaign from last Monday was successfully completed, and the next round of negotiations is already on the schedule.
“This month we want to negotiate with the Bavarian State Forests,” explains Martin Sterflinger, managing director of Bürgerwind Hofoldinger Forst GmbH & Co. KG, to the Münchner Merkur.
Further lease agreement for additional wind turbines
Bürgerwind is the responsible operating company of the planned wind farm in the Hofoldinger Forest.
And now it's nothing less than a further lease agreement for additional wind turbines, since after Aying, Otterfing and Sauerlach, Brunnthal has finally spoken out in favor of wind power (we reported).
According to Sterflinger, the community could set up its own limited partnership (KG) under the umbrella of the parent company Windenergie Hofoldinger Forst GmbH.
Three wind turbines possible on Brunnthaler Flur
When asked, Mayor Stefan Kern (CSU) confirms: "In addition to the three approved wind turbines from Windenergie Hofoldinger Forst GmbH, the old location security agreement of the ARGE communities for the community of Brunnthal via the previous company is to be revived and another three wind turbines are to be built on Brunnthaler Flur." According to Kern, a subsidiary could be founded as a KG for Brunnthal and “the wind turbines could then also be built in Brunnthal in the same way as the wind turbines were built in Aying, Otterfing and Sauerlach”.
Everything can go very quickly
Sauerlach's mayor Barbara Bogner (UBV) also announced: "We are in discussions with the state forestry authorities." However, there are no results regarding Brunnthal yet.
The schedule seems manageable: If the negotiations go well, “things could go quite quickly,” said Sterflinger, since there are already a lot of reports available.
That means: in two to three years, wind turbines would also be turning in the Brunnthal area.