Thinking Aloud wrote:rainbow wrote:Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Places like Mexico could become net exporters of power. The Sahara could bloom with desalinated water produced by plants powered by sunshine.
Deserts are ecosystems in themselves. Destroying them by making them bloom is NOT environmentally friendly.
Covering deserts or mountainsides in solar panels has consequences beyond that too. There's a VAST area of under-utilised rooftops to harness before we start shading nature beneath our quest for energy.
Agreed.
However, placing large scale arrays in the countryside doesn't necessarily imply wholesale enviromental destruction.
For example, if they are elevated, and spaced adequately, even the ground underneath them will still get sufficient light to allow the local ecosystem to continue. Of course, elevation implies a higher construction and maintenance cost.
Other benefits would include the creation of highly skilled jobs in remote areas, with the added benefit that such jobs would result in higher local spending.
Also, by accepting some damage locally, overall, we'd significantly reduce damage by reducing the release of harmful or simply dirty materials into the environment.
And, as regards the notion of greening the Sahara, well, there is vidence that in relatively recent history it was relatively green. There are pictures painted by humans of such scenes. So, perhaps we had a hand in the desertification in the first place. There are very few places on earth untouched by human influence. Many areas we consider to be pristine wilderness actually require human intervention and maintenance.