Originally posted by: dphantom
Originally posted by: OokiiNeko
I'd have to agree. The footprint of solar energy plants is enormous - significantly greater than the footprint for a standard power plant (coal/gas/nuclear). So think of tens of thousands of acres covered in solar panels in a pristine desert environment. That is a huge environmental impact on native plant and animal life.
I strongly disagree with your statement.
Coal/gas/nuclear all turn water into steam. Steam is then used to drive turbines which drive generators producing electricity.
While solar "panels" may take up many times the footprint to produce the equivalent electrical output, solar "boilers" would not.
The turbine/generator part of the equation is proven and reliable. It is how you produce the steam that can be made zero emission.
Wikipedia
Why this thread is locked into solar "panels" is a little strange. Where da geeks at?
🙂
Why? That is my point, we are covering thousands of acres in panels. Sure the turbines take up little space. So what, they take up little space in a coal/gas plant as well.
The other thing I did not mention is the amount of water necessary for these solar plants. Again, in a desert environment where there are already water problems, taking more groundwater or diverting existing rivers to provide sufficient water for a solar plant to turn into steam is another major environmental problem to overcome.
I am not against solar or any other energy producing method. I just want to make sure that the arguments that have traditionally been used against coal/gas/nuclear are in many cases the exact same ones that can be made against solar, wind or geothermal.
I remember a huge uproar I think it was in National Geographic a fwe years back about a single smokestack from a coal-fired plant showing on the horizon and how that disrupted the beauty of the desert environment.
Well how about looking at 20 square miles of nothing but solar panels.