No but when people buy a house that borders an industrial zoned piece of property they should look at the potential uses of the land not just the light warehousing current use.
If people don't do there homework about finding out what is in the area around them before buying their home, that their problem after they move in.
Time after time, these clueless folks or people with a view of changing the area into something different have 2 choices on a project like this; One: move out of the area; 2: learn to live with it.
There are times when NINMBY's needs to happen if something is going to do more harm than good takes place. IE: highway or box stores.
Having your eggs in one basket related to hydro, is a blackout waiting to happen. With these mini power plants, you are taking an area off the grid line to the point if a major outage takes place, these plants can continue to keep power flowing to those areas.
I have been pushing Metrolinx to look at building their own plants for the electrification of the lines so they will have power to continue to operate if there is a major outage. TTC should do the same. By doing so, people still can use transit to get to where they are going in the first place.
Industrial land in the 416 is on the decline because residential needs are pushing them out of the city. Only have to look at the waterfront to see this. Light industrial business and residental can co-exist if people take their blinds off and this starts at the City level. Taxes play a large part of the decline as well buildings are to old to bring them up to current standards and needs.