Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Massive tree cutting for power lines


From NBC:

There is no final number yet, but biologists at the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area now admit to NBCNewYork that tens of thousands of trees would have to be cut down if power companies get their way to expand a high voltage transmission line through the four mile wide park.

In fact, whatever the final route picked for the major upgrade to the grid, that number seems likely to hold as the proposed right of way for the higher voltage line would expand from roughly a hundred feet to 300 feet as it runs through the upper Delaware River Valley to Roseland, N.J.

The preferred route runs through the heart of the 42 mile long unit of the National Park System as it expands an existing right of way that was built before the park was ever created.

Transmission towers would soar as high as 195 feet, in many cases more than double the height of existing towers and much higher than the existing tree line.

But it is the widening of the corridor, and the loss of those tens of thousand of trees, that are among the chief concerns of Park Service biologist Patrick Lynch.

"There's very unique vegetation communities and as such these communities harbor many unique animal species," said Lynch as the Park Service embarks on a major Environmental Impact Study that will not be finished until October of 2012.

That's when New Jersey-based PSE&G had hoped to finish the project at the direction of the grid operator, an obscure entity called PJM that is responsible for power supplies to 13 states and the District of Columbia.

It was the East Coast blackout of 2003 that sent alarm bells ringing that the grid that distributes electricity was not up to the task of a modern day, 'electricity always on'(see: your phone chargers, iPads, computers, power hungry flat screen Tivo'd TV's and other conveniences) society.

Federal energy law was changed, PJM ordered up a major upgrade of power to North Jersey which passes electricity on to New York City, and PSE&G and its Pennsylvania partner chose this route from coal and nuclear plants farther west in Pennsylvania.

But the Park Service is studying other routes that pretty much skirt all or most of the park.

If the Park Service denies the permit, only the President or Congress could overturn it.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow! Trees have become a humans worst enemy.

Anonymous said...

don't tell me Crappy has gone Tree Hugger?

velvethead said...

Yes! And can you imagine how many blades of grass will also succumb to our selfish ways!

Queens Crapper said...

Look asshats, I don't know what blog you have been reading this entire time, but I have made a point of the importance of protecting the environment. If there is another way to do it, we should do it. And the parks head is saying it can be done differently. So let's listen to him.

Gary the Agnostic said...

To Anons 1, 2, and 3: You have an alternative?

gov. arnold schwarzenegger said...

"Asshats". Hahr-hahr. I never heard zat von before. Anudder gut von! Hahr-hahr.

ew-3 said...

Trees grow back. New trees consume CO2, old and dead ones give of C02.

While the trees may not grow back where these are cut down, the are growing back in other places. There are more living trees in the USA today then in colonial times.

Anonymous said...

Everyone loves street trees.........but no one seems to keep the pits clean,the soil loose....and considering this is one of the hottest summers in 25 years....not many folks water them!!?!?!?!?!??!

Anonymous said...

To Gary...I was merely stating that it appears that trees have become an enemy of humans...the rush to chop them down for any and everything. Just like the pelham parkway massacre that is looming around the corner.

I love trees. I'm against chopping them down since they provide us with so many benefits.

georgetheatheist said...

The proposed design of the expanded power towers looks more like the surrounding trees than the currently existing towers.

Auntie Invasion said...

I thought one of the missions of the illegal aliens of Queens County was to kill street trees ASAP by dumping car batteries, cans,cigarettes, used condoms, bottles, baby diapers, old tires, dog crap, kitty litter and old Queens Courier's into the tree pits.

Illegal Aliens who buy houses and subdivide love to chop down those pesky trees. they love to concrete over any gardens.

They view trees are alien to their wonderful cultures which are so much more advanced than lousy US Culture.

Anonymous said...

We're all going to hell in a hand basket.