Dirty Energy vs. Clean Power The Past Battles the Future at Seneca Lake
Dirty Energy vs. Clean Power
The Past Battles the Future at Seneca Lake
By Ellen Cantarow
Let’s amend the famous line from Joni Mitchell’s “Yellow Taxi”
to fit this moment in the Finger Lakes region of New York State. There,
Big Energy seems determined to turn paradise, if not into a parking
lot, then into a massive storage area for fracked natural gas. But
there’s one way in which that song doesn’t quite match reality. Mitchell
famously wrote, “Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what
you've got till it's gone.” As part of a growing global struggle between
Big Energy and a movement focused on creating a fossil-fuel-free
future, however, the residents of the Finger Lakes seem to know just
what they’ve got and they’re determined not to let it go. As a result, a
local struggle against a corporation determined to bring in those
fracked fuels catches a changing mood not just in the United States but
across the world when it comes to protecting the planet, one place at a
time, if necessary.
It’s difficult to imagine a more picturesque landscape, a more
tranquil locale, a more bucolic garden spot than the Finger Lakes
region. Each year, it draws tens of thousands of tourists to gaze at the
waterfalls in Watkins Glen, to kayak and canoe in its deep waters, to
dine in its farm-to-table restaurants and enjoy the homespun hospitality
of its bed and breakfasts. Lush vineyards rustle on tree-studded
hillsides. Wine Enthusiast magazine gave it
top honors last year, calling it “one of the most vibrant and promising
wine regions of the world.” There are fruit and vegetable farms and
sugar maples, too. In 2013, the state’s maple syrup production ranked second only to Vermont’s.
The eleven Finger Lakes are among the wonders of the natural world. At 38 miles in length, Seneca Lake is the second longest of them, its 4.2 trillion gallons
of water provide drinking water for 100,000 people. Its shallows are
home to warm-water fish like smallmouth bass and yellow perch. Its deep
waters play host to lake trout and Atlantic salmon and have created a
unique microclimate in the surrounding region, neither too cold in winter nor too warm in summer, allowing agriculture to flourish.
Perhaps inspired by the ecological marvel that is their home, many of
the Finger Lakes vineyards and vegetable farms rely on sustainable
production methods. At the same time, wineries, hundreds of businesses,
and individual families have begun converting from the use of fossil
fuels to alternative energies. Tompkins County, adjacent to Seneca Lake,
has even developed a solar energy program that has inspired similar
efforts in counties across the state. A regional wind farm is scheduled
to start operating in 2016. Clean and green seems to be the ethos of the
region, but all that could change fast -- and soon.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176021/tomgram%3A_ellen_cantarow%2C_paradise_lost_--_or_found/#more
No comments:
Post a Comment