mousefan73
Germans are faster at dubbing
- Joined
- May 9, 2012
- Messages
- 6,290
Actually this is interesting here in our german tiny village it's a huge political thing right now as a guy wants to build a solar farm as a form of investment. That's for reminding me as tonight is another town hall meeting on this. the only thing I recall being stated at the last meeting( I wasnt there but heard details) is that ecologocially it's a good thing as the fields ( which right now are farmed for biofuel) would revert back to wild fields which then helps the whole bug, bees, butterflys... they are set high enough for the fields to grow naturally back. somoething like that. .. But yes solar is expensive up front. but long-term if oyu can get heating/car fueling out of it,, you win in the end.. but one needs the investment up front.Solar is still quite expensive, it's gone down in costs over the years but that cost is a major barrier for people. Weather can still be an issue. I think there is also an issue with transfer in cases of selling the home in terms of utilities or at least that's what someone recently mentioned in our social networking site for our neighborhood. Storage can still be a concern.
A potential solar farm, the largest in my state, is potentially being built as a joint venture between my county and the one next to it but it would be built by a FL based company who has already drew the ire of the residents as they came in strong talking about legalities rather than hearing the concerns of the people. The county next to me would allow the farm to be as close as 500 feet from someone's property while my county would be 1.5 miles. Combined it could be as large as 2 to 3 thousand acre land used with an expected output peak of 320 megawatts IIRC. Ecological concerns are also there due to the impacts to the land for installation and wildlife during the usage of it.
I live in KS where it's one of the best places for solar due to how many average days of sun we get especially middle and west of the state. We don't have a ton of solar stuff in me area (northeastern) but one of the main utilities companies before they merged with another heavily invested in wind farms. It took approximately 7 years before "savings" was there. But wind farms are also applicable here because of our weather, drive around and see as far as the eye can see once you get to rural area as you drive west giant wind farms, of course there's the ecological impact there mostly birds.
I think solar is getting easier but alternative forms of energy aren't magic bullets either for people. They comes with things too.

