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TexasTowelie

(117,577 posts)
Wed Feb 7, 2018, 06:49 AM Feb 2018

At Colorado utilities hearing, an overwhelming plea for renewable energy

Farmer and rancher Jan Kochis knows what it’s like to live by the whims of the market. Her farm in Elbert County grows dryland corn, millet and wheat — and, as she put it, “Commodity prices are kind of in the tank right now.” Even when prices are high, natural disasters like droughts and floods create significant uncertainty for agricultural producers.

Relief, for Kochis, has come in the form of 30 wind turbines that will soon operate on her shared family farm as part of the Rush Creek Wind Project. Construction is already underway, and she says she’s looking forward to the turbines becoming operational. “Some people say they don’t like to look at them, but I’ll be able to see one right outside my kitchen window. I love them.”

In exchange for allowing the turbines on her land, Kochis will receive some supplemental income, which can be quite a blessing for those who work in agriculture. “Wind and solar investment provides certainty in our unpredictable industry,” she said.

Kochis, chair of the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union, was just one of many Coloradans who testified Thursday evening to support the first step in a transition away from fossil fuels and towards cleaner, renewable energy sources like wind and solar.

Read more: http://www.coloradoindependent.com/168514/puc-colorado-energy-plan-renewable-energy

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At Colorado utilities hearing, an overwhelming plea for renewable energy (Original Post) TexasTowelie Feb 2018 OP
In Indiana you can see a wind farm that goes on for miles and miles along I 65 Botany Feb 2018 #1
We need to change the narrative on clean energy Best_man23 Feb 2018 #2

Botany

(72,667 posts)
1. In Indiana you can see a wind farm that goes on for miles and miles along I 65
Wed Feb 7, 2018, 07:56 AM
Feb 2018



BTW those coal jobs are not coming back.

Best_man23

(5,127 posts)
2. We need to change the narrative on clean energy
Wed Feb 7, 2018, 08:19 AM
Feb 2018

The right's pushback is always "its too risky" or (tin foil hat) "it will pull all the energy out of the sun".

We need to say the need to move to clean energy is a national security priority.

- Every solar and wind farm brought online means less fossil fuel we're buying from the Middle East
- Less fossil fuel purchased means less money to potentially fund terror groups
- Less fossil fuel burned means a cleaner environment and potential (over time) for less severe swings in the weather
- Less severe swings in the weather means reduced need to deploy emergency resources and fewer insurance claims

Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries in the Middle East are making huge investments in solar and clean energy. If they're doing it, we should as well.

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