In Fort Mohave, Arizona, even Republican voters are fighting gas power plants as utilities try to lock in fossil fuels

Over the next few months, the Sunrise Hills retirees – among them many climate crisis skeptics and committed fossil fuel proponents – uncovered a trail of misinformation that appear to suggest MEC and Aepco, which is developing and will own and operate the gas combustion turbines, were at times opaque as they sought to fast track approval and circumvent closer scrutiny. MEC/Aepco “categorically deny” any effort to intentionally mislead anyone.

The retirees organized and began fact-checking and calling out claims about affordability, outages and low pollution made by MEC and Aepco in the glossy brochure and during public meetings.

It turned out that with a capacity of 98 megawatts, the two-turbine proposal fell just under the 100 MW limit that requires a state mandated comprehensive environmental review of impacts such as emissions, noise and water consumption by an expert committee at the state utility regulator, the Arizona corporation commission (ACC). Yet the utility has openly discussed plans to eventually double the size of the plant.

It also turned out that many of the county residents who spoke favorably of the plant in front of the board were in fact MEC employees and board members.

    • RedWeasel@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I understand that there is the general society, but I feel like America is bunch of smaller societies bundled together. On 2 types of extremes Florida and California, but each has smaller groups within. Obviously there are overlaps with certain thoughts of doing things.

      Illinois has solar farms, but also one of the largest suppliers of ethanol for instance.

      I don’t think either of us wrong, just looking at it from different perspectives.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yes, but it’s still an American problem in general. The city with 100 golf courses isn’t in Illinois where it wouldn’t have to be watered all the time. It’s in California. It’s not in Illinois because you can’t play golf with warm weather and sunny skies all year round in Illinois. You need a Southwestern desert for that. Even Florida doesn’t work as well despite the Oralndo golf courses because it rains a lot.

        Meanwhile, Illinois gets nowhere near as much sunshine as the Southwestern desert.

        So until we, as a nation, start building things in places that make more ecological sense rather than more economic sense, it will be an American problem in my eyes.

        • RedWeasel@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Yes, you are definitely correct about this. I was looking more at the energy side while you are looking at it from the water sustainability side. Different part of the overall same thing.

          With climate change I am half expecting to be discussing the “great plains desert” someday in the future, assuming I live that long.

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          5 months ago

          And most water restricted states have had laws regarding the building of new golf courses for at least a generation, including more conservative states like Arizona. There is also a legally set system for water rights based on who first developed the land.

          And it isn’t like other parts of the USA don’t have ecological risks of their own.

      • Strykker@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        I would like to point out that this whole “America is so special! We aren’t just one group but a bunch of different groups” is fucking stupid. Every country is like that, but y’all are too fucking caught up in American exceptionalism to care or notice.

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          5 months ago

          I wouldn’t put it as “America is so special” so much as “America is so big”. I’ve seen a lot of Europeans get pissy about describing the EU in the same manner that the USA is described, and yet both the EU and USA are roughly on the same scale in terms of land size and population.

        • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          States are incredibly more powerful in the US than their equivalent units in the vast majority of other countries. This gives incredible diversity in the government and legal systems that the vast majority of other singular countries just do not have.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        There’s a lot of corn, and there’s huge potential market for a renewable liquid fuel, even after renewable energy and EVs. If they could develop a better product for markets not served by batteries, they could be the new Texas (which was the new Pennsylvania)

        • RedWeasel@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Corn isn’t necessarily the best plant to choose though. Farmers already knew how to farm corn.

          Honestly going forward hydrogen will probably be the preferred energy source. Planet has plenty of water and can be split with electricity. Largest problem is that it requires pressurized containers, and the lack of infrastructure, but that applies to everything except petroleum product.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Sure, Hydrogen would be ideal for the environment, but we also don’t know how to efficiently make, store, or distribute that yet, nor is there any infrastructure of significance yet. We won’t be able to use this for years, a decade or longer

            Corn fuel is a poor choice in several ways yet it’s already manufactured, stored and distributed at scale. It can be used now and reduces carbon emissions for operation now. The shortcomings are on the farming and production side, and can be addressed while we use it. At least in theory: I realize the farming side has not been addressed in the years of ethanol use

            We have the choice whether to support a poor choice available now or a better choice that’s not yet ready or available. However Idaho has a huge investment in that lesser choice so a vested interest in making it more palatable