“The owner [of the Lake Pulaski solar project], multinational conglomerate Enel Green Power, recently clear-cut hundreds of mature hardwood trees to make way for tens of thousands of solar panels later this summer. Angry residents posted dozens of photos of the carnage on the township’s Facebook page, too late to save 11 acres of maple, ash and oak from the chainsaw.”
It’s a given that solar power is unreliable as a source of base load power to meet our daily energy requirements. After all, the sun—at best—shines some of the time. Great River Energy’s experimental solar array in the Twin Cities, for example, operated at 13.6 percent of capacity in 2014. The utility recorded overcast skies a full 70 percent of days, observing clear and sunny conditions just 10 percent of the year.
Nor does solar power cut it economically without state and federal subsidies, rebates and tax credits.
Yet another adverse aspect of this supposedly “clean” energy source continues to be under-appreciated: solar power’s harmful environmental impact.
True, the industry’s dirty little secret has begun to get out, even among like-minded groups such as the Union of Concerned Scientists.
“The potential environmental impacts associated with solar power — land use and habitat loss, water use, and the use of hazardous materials in manufacturing — can vary greatly depending on the technology,” according to the Union of Concerned Scientists’ website.
Moreover, as people around the country begin living alongside actual solar installations, in many instances they’re fighting back.
“Depending on their location, larger utility-scale solar facilities can raise concerns about land degradation and habitat loss,” the liberal UCS states on a web page headlined “The Environmental Impacts of Solar Power.”
A prime example of such environmental degradation has come to light at the Lake Pulaski solar project in Buffalo Township 35 miles west of the Twin Cities.
The project’s owner, multinational conglomerate Enel Green Power, recently clear-cut hundreds of mature hardwood trees to make way for tens of thousands of solar panels later this summer. Angry residents posted dozens of photos of the carnage on the township’s Facebook page, too late to save 11 acres of maple, ash and oak from the chainsaw.
“Since I was a little boy, I was taught that trees give the oxygen back, they hold the soil, they help filtrate the water, they provide homes for wildlife, they slow down the wind and snow,” Buffalo Township Supervisor Don Schmidt said. “Yet they cut them all down to put up solar panels. I haven’t had anybody be able to explain that to me yet how that works.”
Enel Green Power agreed to discuss the locals’ concerns, but expressed no regrets.
“All EGP-NA projects are developed with a comprehensive approach to sustainability in mind, and as a company, we hold ourselves to the highest environmental standards and diligently comply with permitting regulations,” EGP Communications Specialist Krista Barnaby said.
In fact, Minnesotans have little say on many solar projects in their own backyard. State law grants state regulators authority over big solar developments, overriding local zoning laws. A disclaimer posted by Buffalo Township officials typifies local government’s growing frustration.
“The Supervisors had no control over this Solar Field, as the original developers bypassed the township and the county and obtained a permit from the state.”
One thing for sure. Residents will have no problem seeing the forest of solar panels for the trees.
The backlash has led Wright County to pass a moratorium on smaller scale solar farms. Neighboring Carver County has rejected 2 proposed solar facilities opposed by residents. Legislation has been introduced to ban solar developers from removing too many trees in future projects.
Overall, the collateral damage has exposed the reality that solar power isn’t all it’s cracked up to be environmentally.
“These companies come in here and paint such a nice picture. And then you start seeing what they do to the land,” said Tom Kleist, Buffalo Township Clerk and Treasurer. “They’re going to be digging hundreds of holes to put the poles in, which is going to disrupt the soil. They don’t tell you they’re putting roads in all these fields, so they can get their equipment in and out.”
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Tom Steward is Communications Director and an Investigative Reporter at the Center of the American Experiment, a free-market think tank covering Minnesota issues from a pro-liberty, free-market perspective.
The oldest detailed map of Scotland is from 1750. I was trying to work out what the various symbols meant and started a key and obviously looked for “wood”.
I was surprised to find that the map appears to show only one wood in the whole of Scotland. And that the country was far far less wooded in 1750 than today.
After a little thought, I realised that before 1750s there had been widespread industrialisation but that instead of coal, we were using wood and that there were many accounts of whole woods being cut down.
In my local nature reserve I had been tracing the development of the trees since the earliest maps. These show that the area of trees grew from the earliest maps in 1850, which appears to show that fairly soon after the widespread use of coal, people stopped chopping down trees and we started seeing the revival of the forests BECAUSE OF COAL.
So, yet again today, Scotland has become quite wooded in many places – apparently purely because we no longer cut down trees to use as fuel – because we have (had) coal.
However, whilst out canvassing for the EU leave, I was surprised how many people are starting to have wood fires again – I suspect purely because of the “green” obsession against the beneficial use of fossil fuels.
And, to cap it all — a year ago, our local “green” group championed the destruction of a wood that had been in situ since at least 1850 because they deem it was “unnatural”.
… and I forgot to add … who is it that is actually greening the planet by raising CO2 levels? And who would prefer that many of the desert areas that have turned green due to rising CO2 should be returned to dust?
… and of course greens hate trees where they interfere with their damned bird-mincers or where they are in the way of the new power lines from their bird-mincer factories, or where roads have to be built to take the birdmincers to destroy the scenery.
Never in human history have so many people calling themselves “green” done so much to destroy our green planet.
Excellent comment, and points about coal saving trees.
The full story of the “Lenzie chainsaw massacre” is here:
http://www.lenzie.org.uk/index.php/2-uncategorised/27-lenzie-chainsaw-massacre