Electricity has become one of the most important commodities in the region thanks to demand from datacenters, Iran war and rising utility charges

For decades, the only regular visitors to the Twin Lake Reservoir in Lima, Ohio, were fishers passing hot summer evenings trying to snag a largemouth bass.

But today, it’s a hive of activity.

A team of 12 engineers and construction workers are busily connecting more than 3,400 solar arrays to small, floating docks and distributing them across four acres of the reservoir’s surface water.

The electricity generated by the floating photovoltaics will be used to power a nearby water treatment plant, where electricity-powered pumps run 24 hours a day, year-round.

  • endlesseden@pyfedi.deep-rose.org
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    4 days ago

    something, something, solar and wind for decades and no one smart enough to invest.

    countries like Australia, the home owner produces the entire peak hour needs for their community. early and heavy adoption really made a huge difference there, but in the US people refused to invest into anything new (unless it was made by a techbro like apple) and have stagnated their own needs for decades. medical, electrical, transportation, water, sewage. every area of infrastructure in the US is borderline ancient and no one cares because “it works for now”…