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April 15, 2024 US legal experts dispel 14 false claims about solar, wind, electric vehicles Columbia Law School has collected and rebutted 33 false claims against clean energy technology as part of its ongoing research on climate change. From pv magazine USA At first, many people ignored what solar power could do – solar was seen as a cool space science experiment. Then when solar started to grow and the technology matured, they chuckled at the small volume being installed versus the massive volumes of coal, gas and oil that were being extracted daily. Now solar power, and more recently, energy storage, are being installed more than any source of energy ever, and the opposition sometimes takes the form of spreading misinformation from centralized, fossil-funded sources to affect the local acceptability of solar. And it has had an impact. The Sabin Center for Climate Change at Columbia Law School collected 14 false solar power claims in its document, “Rebutting 33 False Claims About Solar, Wind, and Electric Vehicles.” The law school previously launched the Renewable Energy Legal Defense Initiative in 2019, and published discussions of legislation that might slow renewable energy deployment. The list of false solar claims were:
While solar power is the most popular source of electricity in the United States, there are nuances within this popularity. Rooftop solar is the most popular, but solar is getting pushback as it grows beyond 50 acres. And while renewable and clean energy itself are also very popular, there are fossil-fuel industry funded disinformation campaigns that can significantly alter popular opinion. The report from the Sabin Center does not examine the origins of the false claims, nor the motivations of those who disseminate them. Each of the fourteen claims were responded to individually, creating fully developed responses that sometimes repeat information in other rebuttals. To continue reading, please visit our pv magazine USA website.
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