riptides
Super Member
Yet there's generally SOMETHING growing on the space.
Weeds and varmits come to mind.
It's a classic land use battle. And each one looks to be ending up in court. so far.
Yet there's generally SOMETHING growing on the space.
But that doesn’t address my question about killing off green space. If our lands are to be controlled by governments regardingwhat are and are not allowed to be dome with them, why doesn’t government care if solar panels kill off life-giving vegetation below them? What other harmful effects happen to the soil below, both flora and fauna?Let's face it. It's the farmers that are selling the land for solar farms, industrial parks, housing developments, pretty much everything.
And has been profoundly professed on here year after year, is that people have a right to do with their property as they see fit.
So we could ask why are farmers so willing to sell or lease for these projects? Is it because they can't make a living at it? Is it because their kids want nothing to do with it? Is it because they realize they're working themselves to death and can make better, less stressful money by just selling/leasing it? Whole bunch of questions there.
I like the NW Indiana solar farm project because it's not some eminent domain project. It was brought to the 60 or so land owners by a private company and they are leasing the land. They will retain that land in their families. While 13,000 acres sounds huge, we have a friend that owns 10,000. 1 owner. This project is 60+ owners. And of that 13,000 acres, only approximately 2500 will be in solar panels. The rest is woods, wetlands, and crop lands. The spaces between the panels can be farmed for vegetables, berries, sheep grazing, and honey. By not tilling that soil every year, erosion issues are negated. By not farming that soil, pesticides and herbicides and fertilizer will not be entering the environment. Solar panels have a much lower impact on the ground underneath them than farming activities do.
Also deer, bear, fox, wolf predator environments.Weeds and varmits come to mind.
It's a classic land use battle. And each one looks to be ending up in court. so far.
Also deer, bear, fox, wolf predator environments.
What happens to predatory birds (hawks, eagles, etc.) when you cover their hunting grounds with solar panels?
I bet it hastens the extinction of them.
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A lot to be worked out. I dont care much about rooftop solar panels and put the windmills out in the oceans.
I guess that you didn’t read my post that my LG panels are warranted to produce 90.6% after 25 years.I believe 20-25 years and then the degradation of the panels makes them not productive anymore. I read somewhere that they degrade an average of 1-2% in total output year.
Far as decommissioning them and disposing of the panels in a hazardous landfill (they are considered hazardous waste, that is on an individual contract basis. Around here, usually the landowner is 100% responsible for remediation.
The people that out them up don't care, hell, they won't be around to deal with it anyway.
Depends on migratory bird routes and how well they can hold up to salt airI'd say windmills out in the ocean are less eco-friendly than those on land.