See if you agree with either one of three of us or maybe you like Something Different about the Monster Energy cup. We will return to las vegas with busch. As crisp and cold as a mountain stream. It has the same great taste its always had. Even the same sound. [sfx buschhhhh] [sfx buschhhhh] we have seen thrills and spills so far but we are not finished yet. Now its time to find out who will stand tallest among the pros and take home the title of monster cup champion . Its time for bartobar racing and we are moments away from the gate drop of the third and final cup class main event. Now lets send it back upstairs one last time to ralph and jeff. Guys . Thank you, jamie. Here we go. Can you hear the engines come to life before we drop the gate. Lets show you our gopro unique angle. Wait until you see this, jeff. Talk about racing right into your living room yeah, right there in the center there where the left and right starting gates come together. There it is. There is marvin. Ricky t
A Texas company looking to build a 1,500-acre, 175-megawatt solar power project in Greene County has applied for a permit.
On Friday, April 16, Vesper Energy of Houston, Tx., submitted its 136-page application, with 1,055 pages of additional figures and appendices, to the Ohio Power Siting Board, a state office with the authority to approve or deny the project.
Since 2017, the company, once part of the Australian-owned Lendlease, has been seeking leases and preparing studies in the project area, located just southeast of Yellow Springs in portions of Miami Township, Xenia Township and Cedarville Township. The company now has 43-year leases on close to 1,300 acres from 17 landowners.
A utility-scale solar project southeast of Yellow Springs is moving forward, and so is a grassroots effort to stop it.
Vesper Energy is planning to build a 175-megawatt solar photovoltaic array on close to 1,300 acres of farmland spanning Miami, Cedarville and Xenia townships. The Houston, Texas, company hopes to apply for a state permit for its Kingwood solar project in the spring and start producing green electricity in a few years.
But a group of neighbors opposes the project for aesthetic, environmental and economic reasons. Members of the group Citizens for Greene Acres say they want to preserve the rural nature of the area and worry about negative impacts to wildlife, water resources and farmer incomes if it’s built.