Large wind turbines can create long-term income opportunities for farmers, estates and landowners with suitable rural land.
Unlike small domestic systems, these commercial turbines can generate significant electricity and may provide income through land leasing, electricity generation, export agreements and renewable partnerships.
Projects can involve:
- Leasing land to a renewable energy company
- Owning the turbine directly
- Shared ownership arrangements
- Community partnerships
- Selling electricity through export agreements
Large agreements often run for 20–40 years depending on project structure.
Commercial wind projects continue to receive support through wider clean energy and rural energy programmes. Community and development funding routes also remain available in some areas.
Who Is This Suitable For?
Large turbine projects may suit:
- Farmers with large open fields
- Estates and landowners
- Agricultural businesses
- Rural businesses with high electricity use
- Community energy groups
- Diversification projects
Potential Income Streams
Landowners can generate income in several ways:
Lease Land To A Developer
Renewable developers often rent land for turbine installation.
Agreements may include:
- Fixed annual rental payments
- Revenue-sharing arrangements
- Percentage of electricity sales
- Inflation-linked payments
Some projects can generate substantial annual income per turbine, depending on turbine size, location and wind conditions.
Own The Turbine Yourself
Where a farmer owns the turbine:
- Electricity can power the farm first
- Excess electricity can be exported
- Battery systems can increase savings
- Electricity costs can reduce significantly
- Additional export income may be generated
How Much Electricity Can Large Wind Turbines Produce?
Generation depends heavily on wind conditions and turbine size.
Small Farm Turbine (50–100kW)
Approximate output:
- 100,000–300,000 kWh annually
Medium Turbine (500kW)
Approximate output:
- 1–1.5 million kWh annually
Large Commercial Turbine (2–5MW+)
Approximate output:
- 5–15+ million kWh annually
Large systems can generate electricity equivalent to thousands of homes.
Step By Step – Who Should You Contact?
Step 1 – Speak With A Renewable Energy Developer
This is usually the first contact.
Developers assess:
- Wind speeds
- Land size
- Access roads
- Distances from nearby homes
- Site restrictions
- Grid connection suitability
Examples include national renewable developers, wind consultants and land promotion firms.
Step 2 – Contact Business Energy Support Services
Businesses and farms can receive advice before committing.
Scotland
Business Energy Scotland
Phone: 0808 808 2268
Provides:
- Energy assessments
- Renewable project advice
- Funding guidance
- Business support information
Business Energy Scotland provides support funded by the Scottish Government.
Step 3 – Community & Renewable Projects (Scotland)
For larger community or shared ownership projects:
Local Energy Scotland (CARES)
Phone: 0808 808 2288
May provide:
- Project advice
- Community funding routes
- Feasibility support
- Renewable project development assistance
CARES supports community and renewable projects across Scotland.
Step 4 – Contact Your Local Council Planning Department
Large wind turbines generally require planning permission.
Check:
- Height restrictions
- Environmental requirements
- Local policies
- Landscape constraints
- Noise requirements
Step 5 – Contact The Local Distribution Network Operator (DNO)
The local electricity network company checks:
- Grid capacity
- Export availability
- Upgrade costs
- Connection timescales
This step is essential.
Grid connection costs can significantly affect project viability.
Step 6 – Arrange Specialist Surveys
Specialist consultants may carry out:
- Wind monitoring
- Environmental surveys
- Wildlife studies
- Energy output forecasts
- Noise assessments
- Financial feasibility reports
Step 7 – Legal Review
Before signing any agreement:
Speak with a solicitor experienced in:
- Renewable land agreements
- Agricultural leases
- Access rights
- Rent review clauses
- Decommissioning obligations
- Long-term contracts
Many agreements can last decades.
Additional Information
- Large turbines perform best on exposed rural land
- Strong wind conditions are essential
- Grid capacity can be one of the biggest issues
- Planning approval is normally required
- Community and renewable support programmes remain available in some areas
Need Information On Current Grants & Support?
Contact Grants Gateway to discuss renewable energy support routes that may apply to farms, landowners and rural businesses.




