"Green Path" Energy Corridor Raises Environmental Dilemma

MORONGO VALLEY, CA - APRIL 11: A ladybug crawls on new honey mesquite leaves as recovery from a 2005 wildfire continues at Big Morongo Wildlife Preserve on April 11, 2007 in Morongo Valley, California. The preserve, faces the prospect of being affected by a proposed plan to build power lines and transmission towers to deliver "green" energy to Los Angeles from geothermal, solar, and nuclear sources in southeastern California near the Salton Sea, and Arizona. The 85-mile-long "Green Path" energy corridor being pushed by Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to bring nonpolluting power to Los Angeles would cut through two desert wildlife preserves, a national forest, and Pioneertown, a set used in the filming of countless westerns. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP) and the mayor have been condemned by more than a dozen preservation and community groups for the project that threatens to destroy wildlife corridors, natural areas, and vistas. Big Morongo Canyon, west of Joshua Tree National Park, is designated by the Bureau of Land Management as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern and is one of the 10 largest cottonwood and willow riparian, or stream, habitats in California. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
MORONGO VALLEY, CA - APRIL 11: A ladybug crawls on new honey mesquite leaves as recovery from a 2005 wildfire continues at Big Morongo Wildlife Preserve on April 11, 2007 in Morongo Valley, California. The preserve, faces the prospect of being affected by a proposed plan to build power lines and transmission towers to deliver "green" energy to Los Angeles from geothermal, solar, and nuclear sources in southeastern California near the Salton Sea, and Arizona. The 85-mile-long "Green Path" energy corridor being pushed by Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to bring nonpolluting power to Los Angeles would cut through two desert wildlife preserves, a national forest, and Pioneertown, a set used in the filming of countless westerns. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP) and the mayor have been condemned by more than a dozen preservation and community groups for the project that threatens to destroy wildlife corridors, natural areas, and vistas. Big Morongo Canyon, west of Joshua Tree National Park, is designated by the Bureau of Land Management as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern and is one of the 10 largest cottonwood and willow riparian, or stream, habitats in California. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
"Green Path" Energy Corridor Raises Environmental Dilemma
ライセンスの購入
どんな用途に素材を使えますか?
¥38,500
JPY

詳細

制限:
商業目的またはプロモーション目的で使用する場合は、ゲッティ イメージズのオフィスへお問い合わせください。 報道、編集用途の全権利保有: UK、米国、アイルランド、カナダ(ケベックを除く)。 その他の国の日刊新聞での報道、編集用途の制限付きの権利については、電話にてお問い合わせください。
クレジット:
David McNew / スタッフ
報道写真番号:
73862874
コレクション:
Getty Images News
作成日:
2007年04月11日(水)
アップロード日:
ライセンスタイプ:
リリース情報:
リリースされていません。 詳細情報
ソース:
Getty Images North America
オブジェクト名:
73851112DM007_Green_Path_En