vimarsana.com

Page 27 - புதியது இங்கிலாந்து சுத்தமான ஆற்றல் இணைக்கவும் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Tiny bats put kibosh on power corridor tree-cutting for 2 months

Tiny bats put kibosh on power corridor tree-cutting for 2 months Share Updated: 2:22 PM EDT May 18, 2021 The Associated Press Robert F. Bukaty/AP FILE - In this April 26, 2021 file photo, workers for Northern Clearing pound stakes to mark land on an existing Central Maine Power power line corridor that has been recently widened to make way for new utility poles, near Bingham, Maine. Tree-cutting on a key stretch of the power line in western Maine is going to stop almost as soon as it started to protect the newly born young of a federally protected bat. A federal appeals court last week gave the green light for construction on a 53-mile segment of the New England Clean Energy Connect, but construction will have to stop in June and July to protect the northern long-eared bat, which has been hard-hit by so-called white nose syndrome. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

Legislation Would Help Create Power Line For Renewable Energy Made In Aroostook County

AP FILE - In this Jan. 24, 2007, file photo, a cluster of windmills of the north side of Mars Hill Mountain is seen in Mars Hill, Maine. There was early momentum Tuesday for what could be Maine s next big transmission project linked to renewable energy goals, this one in Aroostook County. The latest plan, as envisioned in legislation before the utilities committee, got a positive review at the State House. Energy analysts say the County has some of the state s best potential for developing cost-effective wind and other renewable energy resources. But the area lacks a major transmission connection to the regional electricity grid, relying instead on energy routed through Canada.

Tiny bats put kibosh on CMP power line tree-cutting for 2 months

Tiny bats put kibosh on CMP power line tree-cutting for 2 months Northern long-eared bats are federally protected because their population has been decimated by so-called white-nose syndrome. By DAVID SHARPAssociated Press Share Workers for Northern Clearing pound stakes to mark land on an existing Central Maine Power power line corridor that has been recently widened to make way for new utility poles, near Bingham in April. Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press Tree-cutting on a key stretch of a power line in western Maine is going to stop almost as soon as it started to protect the newly born young of a federally protected bat.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.