and Western MA doesn't need any more water. So let's drain Quabbin Reservoir!NH doesn't need any more power.
Get out, go home.
and Western MA doesn't need any more water. So let's drain Quabbin Reservoir!NH doesn't need any more power.
Get out, go home.
and Western MA doesn't need any more water. So let's drain Quabbin Reservoir!
Well, I'm not ranking on CT or MA or anyplace, apology accepted. It's just my opinion that NH doesn't need any more power. Our population is shrinking (just like most of New England and the northeast), and I don't see any new business' being built either. I'm just wary when a salesperson comes knocking on my door with an idea to sell me something that I dont need/want, especially given the associated environmental cost.
As you know, that's how business works. If sales are flat, they (the electric companies) need to create opportunities to sell. They're trying to sell us their idea. But do we really need it? I'm not at all convinced that we do. I think the electric companies may be selling us a solution to a problem that doesn't exist.
If CT/MA decides they need power, must you get it from the north? Couldn't the Connecticut River be used for hydroelectricity? How about wind farms off the coast?
I refuse to support the idea that hacking thru thousands of acres of woodlands and running unsightly cables and towers is the only way to address this perceived "problem", which may or may not exist.
Ji..y Ca...r (avoiding politics)had it right, and we would be in less of a predicament if grassroot effort was continued a long time ago to conserve and distribute small scale solutions and generation.
Of course land in this area is far more expensive and a lot more people could be affected.
So....? What is your implication?
The more the whole project costs, the less economically viable it may be - the 2nd reactor at Seabrook was killed for cost not environmental reasons
The more total people that oppose the project, the more likely the state is to find a way to stop it
For those who might be interested, today's edition of The Exchange (NHPR) was about this project. Note that I did not listen to it (yet) myself. You can stream it or download it from here:
http://nhpr.org/debating-northern-pass
Tim
My takeaway was that this project is a money grab for the utilities. We dont need the power, esp given the environmental costs. (It's pointed out that NH has an 18% surplus of power in it's grid.) It's just that PSNH & HydroQuebec need the revenue and they're trying to stuff this project down our throats. It wouldn't be the first time.
Here's the facebook page for Stop The Northern Pass initiative;
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