On Tuesday, April 16, at 7:15 p.m. at the county courthouse, the Saline County Planning and Zoning Board will meet to consider approving an application to construct a new solar energy facility near Tobias.
All interested parties are invited to attend this meeting for a chance to be heard regarding this proposed project. Written testimony and phone calls will also be accepted by calling (402) 821-3326 or emailing lweber@salinecountyne.gov.
According to public notice, the new solar generation farm would be on roughly 10 acres, which is about the size of 10 football fields.
The solar facility is being proposed by a company called Today's Power, along with Norris Public Power. It would generate only 992 kilowatts, which would only be enough to power a small handful of homes, according to our research.
This project is among the hundreds or thousands across the country using taxpayer funds to build renewable energy projects, in most cases with materials or finished goods from China. Funds include the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Energy for America Program, a program created through the so-called Inflation Reduction Act, a priority of the Biden administration.
A separate meeting regarding this proposed solar project will be held 9:30 a.m. on April 30, when the Saline County commissioners will take up the plan.
Vil Dweller's Note: The agendas for these upcoming meetings were taken from notices published in The Crete News. The county has not yet posted them on the official county website, which is a shame when considering how much residents are paying in property taxes for local government services. Property taxes are levied locally by local schools and governments, not the state; this is something the current governor of Nebraska and many in the Legislature have yet to grasp.
Harvard Business Review--"Economic incentives are rapidly aligning to encourage customers to trade their existing panels for newer, cheaper, more efficient models. In an industry where circularity solutions such as recycling remain woefully inadequate, the sheer volume of discarded panels will soon pose a risk of existentially damaging proportions." https://hbr.org/2021/06/the-dark-side-of-solar-power
ReplyDeleteAnd whose fault is it that forward thinking China is ahead of the USA when it come to solar power and renewable energies?
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