19 Apr, 2010 in News & Articles by admin

EPA considers using brownfield sites for uncluttered energy

Landfills as well as brownfields may soon become combined take developmental areas that include wind, solar as well as other renewable energy power projects. An engineering firm in the UK, Waste Recycling Group, wants to invest £100 million to install wind turbines at landfill sites throughout England, Scotland as well as Wales. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is interested in trying the alike thing.

Because of the contamination at brownfield sites, it can be difficult to take them for retail, residential, office, unfastened space or other purposes. Toxic substances similar mercury, asbestos, lead, chromium, industrial solvents as well as compounds used to make plastic make these former industrial or commercial sites unsuitable for most types of redevelopment. When the land is sufficiently cleaned up for people to walk on it, but not necessarily to spend extended periods of time on it, these otherwise undesirable sites become ideal for renewable energy projects. Many people want to be capable to take uncluttered, renewable energy, but few people want a wind farm in their backyards. Because most homes as well as businesses are already located farther away from landfills as well as other brownfield sites, adding uncluttered energy sources to the properties should not negatively affect the area.

There are 490,000 brownfield sites on nearly 15 million acres across the United States that could potentially be used for renewable energy projects. The EPA has partnered with the Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) for this effort, as well as over 900,000 acres possess already been remediated, with agreements made to reuse the land for uncluttered energy. The EPA has invested $650,000 in the project.

For the filled story, go to Uncluttered Technica.

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