A Cac town in NC rejected plans to rezone for a solar after fears it can cause cancer

JamesATL

Lurker
BGOL Investor
566eb53f1600002c00eb8b3b.jpeg


A town council in North Carolina rejected plans to rezone land for a solar farm after residents voiced fears it would cause cancer, stop plants from growing and suck up all the energy from the sun.

Two citizens reportedly made the allegations at a Woodland Town Council meeting in Northampton County, northeastern North Carolina, on Wednesday.

Bobby Mann said the farm would "suck up all the energy from the sun and businesses would not come to Woodland," the Roanoke-Chowan Herald-News reports.

Retired science teacher Jane Mann feared the proposed solar ranch could hinder photosynthesis -- the process of converting light energy from the sun into chemical energy for fuel -- in the area and stop plants from growing.


She added that no one could tell her solar panels didn't cause cancer.

Other residents feared the effect it would have on the price of their homes.

Councilors were voting on whether to redefine agriculturally designated land off U.S. Highway 258 for manufacturing.

Strata Solar Company representative Brent Niemann told the meeting the only sunlight used would be that which fell on the panels directly. "The panels don't draw additional sunlight," he said.

He told councilors that the farm would have no effect on property prices and promised that no toxic substances would be kept on site.

But Woodland Town Council turned down the proposal, effectively stopping the company from building the planned renewable energy ranch. The council later voted to put a moratorium on future solar farms in the area, the Herald-News reports.

Solar Power World Online ranks North Carolina fourth in the U.S. for installed solar power capacity, with 161 companies employing 3,100 people in the industry.
 
Their installing joints like those up the street from my crib. I was hoping for a new target or hhgreggs but ol well.
 
I'm laughing but :smh: at the same time. That is my area but they don't know any better. People try to improve the economics in that small ass town and these damn rednecks do this! SMMFH
 
Am I looking at the wrong Woodland in North Carolina? The town I see is basically 50 percent black. It's in a democratic region and has approved 3 solar farms already. How is it a cac town?

Like others in this thread I thought everyone against the parks was batshit, but once I found out the town wasn't a 'cac' town I wondered what else could be wrong with the piece. I did a quick google search on solar parks...

http://www.theguardian.com/sustaina...-parks-impact-environment-soil-plants-climate

It's clear that PV panels will cause shading and changes to wind flow, and in principle is likely to alter temperature, change the rainfall distribution (which impacts on soil moisture) and the wind flow over the land.

But we just don't know enough about what happens to the soil, plants and wildlife in areas where ground mounted PV parks are constructed. The phenomenon is still a new one and rapid development is taking place on the basis of ignorance. But the effect the PV panels have on the local climate and what impact this has on the plants and soil is very important.

The 'crazy' lady might be right about vegetation around the parks dying.

Cancer concerns seem to stem from panels containing carcinogenic materials, which SUPPOSEDLY aren't a problem if the panels are intact.
http://cleantechnica.com/2014/05/01/solar-panels-toxic-emissions/

Last year Robert Lundahl and I co-wrote an article about a California PV solar factory that is not disposing of their solar panels once their lifespan expires. We could not name the company, as our source still works there, but they use a known carcinogenic called gallium arsenide. This is not believed to be a problem as long as the panels are intact. However, if they end up in a landfill, the panels will be broken and the toxins can leech into the soil. Environment California recently directed me to a study that puts this problem in context and suggests areas where the industry can improve.

Learn something new every day with fucking Google... lol
 
Back
Top