The country’s largest area designated for solar energy, Desert Center shows how sprawls of PV panels impact communities.
solar panels in a desert seems relative low impact infrastructure
Submitted 4 weeks ago by SteveKLord@slrpnk.net to energy@slrpnk.net
The country’s largest area designated for solar energy, Desert Center shows how sprawls of PV panels impact communities.
solar panels in a desert seems relative low impact infrastructure
But have you considered how much worse the poor NIMBY’s views out their windows will be, why you might even see something more interesting than desert, the horror./s
Sometimes, you have to make sacrifices to stave off previously unknown levels of human misery.
The alternative is communities (like Louisiana’s “cancer alley”) impacted in way worse way.
Was reading an article about creation of a large public beach. It only sat 2ft above sea level and often washed over in high tide. The developers bulldozed sand from the sea side to bring it up to 12ft. But they had big troubles with wind blowing the sand inland. It almost scuttled the whole project.
So they planted hardy native grass that grew roots toward the water. It mitigated the dust problem.
Wonder if a similar thing can be done with native desert vegetation to solve this problem.
reddig33@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
I fail to see the “struggle”. It’s not like this stuff spews soot into the area or something. It’s innocuous.
eatthecake@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
They’re not trying to stop it but they want negative impacts mitigated. This seems reasonable.
reddig33@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
Smells like bullshit excuses. The same article talks about “They want a buffer zone to protect their viewscape and other proposed developments in the area, like new housing and a gas station.” So they don’t have a problem with that construction kicking up dust or using water — just the solar farm construction.
SteveKLord@slrpnk.net 4 weeks ago
Thank you for a reading the article and responding with substance from it that considers what it instead of being dismissive. These projects are far from perfect.