Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.TheReal_ND wrote:That is cool. There's got to be a biochemical way to harness sun light as well.
They may help us, but they destroy ecosystems.
Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.TheReal_ND wrote:That is cool. There's got to be a biochemical way to harness sun light as well.
That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.The Conservative wrote:Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.TheReal_ND wrote:That is cool. There's got to be a biochemical way to harness sun light as well.
They may help us, but they destroy ecosystems.
This. We have no shortage of deserts around for this. Just have to pay some poor bastard to clean off the panels every day.Montegriffo wrote:That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.The Conservative wrote:Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.TheReal_ND wrote:That is cool. There's got to be a biochemical way to harness sun light as well.
They may help us, but they destroy ecosystems.
You could pay someone or you could just automate it. Something like a windscreen wiper.GrumpyCatFace wrote:This. We have no shortage of deserts around for this. Just have to pay some poor bastard to clean off the panels every day.Montegriffo wrote:That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.The Conservative wrote:
Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.
They may help us, but they destroy ecosystems.
Have you seen how large these things are?Montegriffo wrote:You could pay someone or you could just automate it. Something like a windscreen wiper.GrumpyCatFace wrote:This. We have no shortage of deserts around for this. Just have to pay some poor bastard to clean off the panels every day.Montegriffo wrote:
That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.
http://www.latimes.com/local/california ... story.htmlMontegriffo wrote:That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.The Conservative wrote:Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.TheReal_ND wrote:That is cool. There's got to be a biochemical way to harness sun light as well.
They may help us, but they destroy ecosystems.
6000 annually? I'm sure 6000 birds are killed daily by big rigsThe Conservative wrote:http://www.latimes.com/local/california ... story.htmlMontegriffo wrote:That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.The Conservative wrote:
Yeah, just google videos about birds chasing bugs into those things.
They may help us, but they destroy ecosystems.
Not...
Lets take this into consideration, rigs have been around for how many decades?California wrote:6000 annually? I'm sure 6000 birds are killed daily by big rigsThe Conservative wrote:http://www.latimes.com/local/california ... story.htmlMontegriffo wrote:
That's why you build them in places like Morocco, there is very little wildlife in the Sahara desert and you are not using valuable farmland. There are many such areas around the globe where the land has no other use and can be used for solar energy. If you really care about wildlife then the faster we can move away from fossil fuels the better. Changing the climate will damage the environment far more than solar energy.
Not...
What's your point? That orders of magnitude are killed more by wind than solar?The Conservative wrote:Lets take this into consideration, rigs have been around for how many decades?California wrote:6000 annually? I'm sure 6000 birds are killed daily by big rigs
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 0/abstract
Lets also look at this abstract:
Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area, California: 888,000 bat and 573,000 bird fatalities/year (including 83,000 raptor fatalities)/year in 2012...
You do the math...