Sacrificing U.S. forests for solar energy "misses the plot" on climate action
Release Date: 07/23/2024
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info_outlineU.S. states such as Vermont and Massachusetts are cutting thousands of acres of forest for solar power projects, despite the fact that this harms biodiversity and degrades ecosystems' carbon sequestration capacity.
Journalist and author Judith Schwartz joins the Mongabay Newscast to speak with co-host Mike DiGirolamo about the seeming irony of cutting forests for renewable energy, and why she says states like hers are 'missing the plot' on climate action: she lives near a forest in southwestern Vermont where a company has proposed an 85-acre project that would export its electricity 100 miles south, to customers in Connecticut.
A recent report found that such deforestation in nearby Massachusetts is unnecessary to meet that state's clean energy commitments, and would be better achieved by using already developed land like rooftops and parking lots, instead of farms or forests.
Yet the acreage lost to solar energy projects in Massachusetts since 2010 has already released the equivalent of the annual emissions of more than 100,000 cars.
Read Judith Schwartz's commentary for Mongabay about this situation here.
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Image: An array of ground mounted solar panels. Image by Derek Sutton via Unsplash
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Timecodes
(00:00) Introduction
(03:09) The Irony of Clearing Forests for Renewable Energy
(10:19) AI and Data Centers Increasingly Demand More Energy
(16:24) Forests and Heat Mitigation
(25:46) Community Awareness and Action
(35:10) Credits