Brings to mind:

Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
Pretty certain the average person in a communist country wants everything cheap as welldue to capitalism we want everything cheap
I'm interested to learn more about that to increase my knowledge. At the moment we have the highest one in England just outside our town at 147m. Apparently it's also the most powerful, generating 4.1MW.
The one in Methill generates 7MW and is nearly 200m to blade tip - it's quite big...
At 2.4 tonnes per M3 that's a lot of concreteI forget exactly but I'm sure it's something like 8000 tonnes of concrete per base.
The last lot of wood to be cut from the forest here went straight to Drax. These weren't left overs but acres of mature trees.but some will rely on 'leftovers' from forestry harvesting and it's attendant impacts. As with other biofuels, there is the whole issue of using land just for fuel supply rather than food or just leaving it to nature.
One in Cumbria I am aware of from a few years ago was trying to be reliant on their waste and local short rotation coppiced willow, the willow having significant positive side effects of growing well on marginal damp land, biodiversity improvements and flood mitigationThe biomass/wood power stations are particularly bad, as I think they rely heavily on imported fuel from North America.
Its not quite that binary but at some point humans have to learn to live in partnership with their home or it's going to get very unpleasant for us when the food runs out, the seas rise, deserts grow and huge numbers of humans are displaced and starving.Yes it will be awful and yes some flowers and animals will become extinct but if the alternative is for my children and grand children to become extinct then I'm afraid the plants and animals will have to go.
I cycled through what was at the time of construction the largest land based windfarm in England today and it wasn't turning nor were all the other wind farms I saw on the skylineIf that means putting wind farms on top of every hill in the country then that's what we have to do.
I'm sorry but that is one of the most astonishingly arrogant sentences I've read in years!
Yes it will be awful and yes some flowers and animals will become extinct but if the alternative is for my children and grand children to become extinct then I'm afraid the plants and animals will have to go.
I would point out that those plants and animals you are so quick to dismiss need exactly the same things your children and grandchildren will need. It is becoming increasingly obvious that the "people are more important than plants and animals" is exactly the thinking that has got us into the hole we find ourselves in now. The solution will not be found in sacrificing bits of the natural world for the greater good of people, the natural world including people all survive together or we will all fall together.thenorthwind wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 9:37 pmHow do you see that working out for your children and grandchildren?
Not nothing: We got ~400 metres of pavement through the village in exchange for the local wind farm.
Depends how long it is before we start trying to save things ( all of us having something worth saving even if it's just yourself)Like I said earlier ... how long before there's nothing worth saving?