![Wind-energy projects like the Groton Wind Farm in New Hampshire require huge amounts of land -- and rural communities are not all happy about it. <em>Credit: AerialPhotoNH</em> Wind-energy projects like the Groton Wind Farm in New Hampshire require huge amounts of land -- and rural communities are not all happy about it. Credit: AerialPhotoNH](https://ccs.boilermakers.org/sites/default/files/styles/blog_612x380/public/groton-windmills_0.jpg?itok=WYMuAGxW)
Wind-energy projects like the Groton Wind Farm in New Hampshire require huge amounts of land -- and rural communities are not all happy about it. Credit: AerialPhotoNH
Viewpoints |
New York Post
March 9, 2020
There’s an old saw in the trash business that says, “everybody wants their trash picked up but nobody wants it put down.”
That’s not a perfect analogy for what’s happening with renewable-energy projects in New York and New England but the sentiment behind it is familiar.
Source Post Date:
March 7, 2020
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