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Environment & Energy
Showing Original Post only (View all)Sacrificing the desert to save the Earth [View all]
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-solar-desert-20120205,0,7889582.storyReporting from Ivanpah Valley, Calif.
Construction cranes rise like storks 40 stories above the Mojave Desert. In their midst, the "power tower" emerges, wrapped in scaffolding and looking like a multistage rocket.
Clustered nearby are hangar-sized assembly buildings, looming berms of sand and a chain mail of fencing that will enclose more than 3,500 acres of public land. Moorings for 173,500 mirrors each the size of a garage door are spiked into the desert floor. Before the end of the year, they will become six square miles of gleaming reflectors, sweeping from Interstate 15 to the Clark Mountains along California's eastern border.
BrightSource Energy's Ivanpah solar power project will soon be a humming city with 24-hour lighting, a wastewater processing facility and a gas-fired power plant. To make room, BrightSource has mowed down a swath of desert plants, displaced dozens of animal species and relocated scores of imperiled desert tortoises, a move that some experts say could kill up to a third of them.
Despite its behemoth footprint, the Ivanpah project has slipped easily into place, unencumbered by lasting legal opposition or public outcry from California's boisterous environmental community.
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They aren't "sacrificing the desert" - the deserts are growing - because of global warming.
bananas
Feb 2012
#2
In the article it says that a land area as big as LA, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties
XemaSab
Feb 2012
#5
The historical Dust Bowl was due to a combination of drought and breaking up the topsoil
XemaSab
Feb 2012
#17
Hopelessly flailing against the very solution to the global warming problem still I see.
txlibdem
Feb 2012
#18
So we should destroy people's homes and livelihoods before relocating a turtle to another place?
txlibdem
Feb 2012
#33
It's too bad there aren't any big, flattish, unused, sunny surfaces in cities.
LeftyMom
Feb 2012
#35
That's why residents of those cities can put up solar panels... just don't bulldoze their homes
txlibdem
Feb 2012
#57
“…they represent but a pin prick compared to the scale of solar thermal plus solar PV that we need…”
OKIsItJustMe
Feb 2012
#54
The scale is massive, yes, but no more massive than other projects we have built
txlibdem
Feb 2012
#20
Yet even a small change to their environment will spell certain peril for their species
txlibdem
Feb 2012
#26
And how many square miles of land will be yielded uninhabitable by a solar accident?
OKIsItJustMe
Feb 2012
#27