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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'Destroying this place': Residents despair over massive project in tiny California town with no stoplights, 2000 people
this is the best photo I could find for the project.
There are no stoplights in Boron. Theres no youth center either, though much of the towns daily life revolves around its children. There are still Joshua trees, only a few thousand less now. Carless residents, of which there are many in the Mojave Desert town of about 2,000, walk and bike atop cracked, damaged pavement on Boron Avenue to the towns only market.
For months now, their treks have been accompanied by a daily parade of work trucks hauling water and construction materials to the site of one of Californias largest new solar projects, an endeavor that Boron residents fear is poisoning their town.
Left in the dust
On a warm October night last fall, I sat near a taxidermied bobcat and a trove of other historical Mojave memorabilia inside Borons treasured Twenty Mule Team Museum. A group of locals gathered there to discuss the Aratina Solar Project, which was just starting to make headway less than a mile from the towns southern boundary.
The destruction of Joshua trees and other facets of the areas fragile desert ecosystem has been a main point of contention regarding the 2,300-acre project which, when completed, is slated to transport solar energy to cities in Silicon Valley and along the Central Coast. But many residents are worried about a different problem: a deadly fungal disease that wreaks havoc on Kern County, without fail, year after year.
I know all the talks been about Joshua trees, but the real concern is valley fever, resident Roy Richards said. Ive seen sand and dust blowing off the project, and itll go 4 or 5 miles. And this is less than half a mile from an elementary school.
https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/boron-aratina-solar-fight-20152346.php
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'Destroying this place': Residents despair over massive project in tiny California town with no stoplights, 2000 people (Original Post)
BlueWaveNeverEnd
Feb 11
OP
alarimer
(16,928 posts)1. I don't think we should be destroying ecosystems in the name of clean energy
I don't know if these people are right that this project is "poisoning" them, but we must put ecosystem protection (especially fragile desert ones) ahead of any economic gain, even if it allegedly for the right reasons. Shooting ourselves in the foot doing stuff like this.
hunter
(39,379 posts)2. We won't save the world by destroying it.
These solar and wind projects built on previously undeveloped landscapes and seascapes are vile.
There's plenty of room for solar on rooftops, parking lots, etc..
But the saddest thing is that solar and wind are dependent on fossil fuels, especially natural gas, for their economic viability. The are incapable of displacing fossil fuels entirely.
Reducing fossil fuel use isn't good enough. We need to quit them entirely.