2006年VOA标准英语-Hydropower has a Dam-less Future(在线收听) |
By Zulima Palacio --------------------------------------------- Safe Harbor Water Power Dam is one of the largest non-government hydro plants in the United States. It was built in 1931, as the third main plant on the lower Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. Hydropower has been used for centuries, harnessing the power of water flowing downward. That has often meant building dams. But dams carry a number of drawbacks, including their impact on the environment, high construction cost, and displacement of people when artificial lakes are created. Marshall Kaiser, the president and Chief Executive Officer at Safe Harbor, says dams also have a significant impact on fish populations. In the U.S., where hydropower represents eight percent of the electricity for the country, there are no plans to build any large new dams in the future. However, there are plans to use more of the existing dams to generate electric power. When Safe Harbor Dam was built it was dedicated only to the generation of electricity. The other two dams nearby, like nearly 98,000 other dams in the country, were built only for irrigation, water supply and flood control. Church Ciocci says, "Even if you look at Hoover, as popular as the Hoover dam is, that dam was first built for water purposes beyond energy. They added energy to help pay for it." There is another, more unconventional way of generating electricity through waterpower. Taylor says the potential for the new technology in rivers and oceans around the world is extensive. Just in the U.S. the interest is increasing rapidly. Taylor says his major focus is in the developing world. His company is now looking at remote villages that run on polluting and expensive diesel generators. "Right now we have a team in Brazil, examining the Amazon basin. The Brazilian government is very interested in this types of technologies for the rural electrification of Brazil." However, experts agree that while the underwater turbines are good, they could never replace the power capability of a dam or its durability. Marshall Kaiser, with Safe Harbor Dam, says, "At the end of our license we will be 100 years old and we have every expectation to be re-licensed another 30 years, and another 30, and 30 more." Well over half of the planet is water and the use of tides and currents for the production of electricity could be endlessly renewable. The use of dams will remain more controversial. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/5/32393.html |