I live in a little town with a small localized Power Company. When the big grids in Northern California go offline during bad storms, we still have power. If one of the big lumber trucks runs into one of our power line transformer poles (whatever you call those things) and knocks the power out for a while (the longest I’ve seen the power out here is 8 hours), that little company has workers out immediately and it’s up and running in really quick time. For the future, maybe they’ll put in Alternative Energy Solutions. A number of homeowners have solar panels. I’ve even seen a couple of baby windmills, the cylinder type. But I’m told we don’t get enough of either sunlight or wind in the winter time to rely on that type of alternative energy. Of course there’s always propane. In the wintertime you can smell when the homeowners are using wood burners to heat their houses. Real wood and wood pellets can get to be expensive though. If air quality is poor, they are asked not to burn.
Tesla put in a bid to put in power installations that would work independently of each other, on alternative renewable energy solutions. I doubt that it would cost three hundred million dollars. I think Tesla has more than two employees trained in the construction of installations. It would probably be a better set up for Puerto Rico than the Whitefish contract. I doubt that Tesla would farm out all the work to Stateside contractors. It’s entirely conceivable that he would hire Puerto Ricans rather than mainlanders.
I live in a little town with a small localized Power Company. When the big grids in Northern California go offline during bad storms, we still have power. If one of the big lumber trucks runs into one of our power line transformer poles (whatever you call those things) and knocks the power out for a while (the longest I’ve seen the power out here is 8 hours), that little company has workers out immediately and it’s up and running in really quick time. For the future, maybe they’ll put in Alternative Energy Solutions. A number of homeowners have solar panels. I’ve even seen a couple of baby windmills, the cylinder type. But I’m told we don’t get enough of either sunlight or wind in the winter time to rely on that type of alternative energy. Of course there’s always propane. In the wintertime you can smell when the homeowners are using wood burners to heat their houses. Real wood and wood pellets can get to be expensive though. If air quality is poor, they are asked not to burn.
Tesla put in a bid to put in power installations that would work independently of each other, on alternative renewable energy solutions. I doubt that it would cost three hundred million dollars. I think Tesla has more than two employees trained in the construction of installations. It would probably be a better set up for Puerto Rico than the Whitefish contract. I doubt that Tesla would farm out all the work to Stateside contractors. It’s entirely conceivable that he would hire Puerto Ricans rather than mainlanders.