By FRANK CARINI
Rhode Island just
doesn’t get it, even when it tries to be 21st century.
Cutting down 30,000 trees to make room for a solar farm is only slightly less 1980's than destroying 200 acres of forest to build a fossil-fuel power plant.
Cutting down 30,000 trees to make room for a solar farm is only slightly less 1980's than destroying 200 acres of forest to build a fossil-fuel power plant.
The smallest state has
plenty of wasted space, in the form of brownfields, old landfills, rooftops,
parking lots and empty big-box retailers, but the Ocean State seems driven to
Paul Bunyan its way to the future.
The latest ax-wielding
project, being proposed by Southern Sky Renewable Energy LLC for 73 acres off Main Street in Ashaway,
is a 13.8-megawatt solar installation, with 43,000 solar panels, that would
require the clear-cutting of 60 forest acres.
“I mourn the loss of
30,000 trees, I really do,” Town Council member David Husband is quoted as
saying in a recent Westerly Sun story. “But something’s going in there sooner or later.”