>The looming challenge over how to handle truckloads of contaminated waste illustrates how cutting-edge environmental policy can create unforeseen hazards down the road.
To be fair, perfectly foreseen[0] but - for some reasons - ignored.
>Beginning in 2006, the state, focused on how to incentivize people to take up solar power, showered subsidies on homeowners who installed photovoltaic panels but had no comprehensive plan to dispose of them. Now, panels purchased under those programs are nearing the end of their 25-year lifecycle.
BTW, 2022-2006=16, quite different from 25.
[0] when you have something that is rated as lasting 20-25 years, it is not difficult to foresee that in 20-25 years (actually much earlier than that, as the lifecycle estimates tend to be generous) there will be the need of disposing (be it recycling/refurbishing/dumping) of that something.
To be fair, perfectly foreseen[0] but - for some reasons - ignored.
>Beginning in 2006, the state, focused on how to incentivize people to take up solar power, showered subsidies on homeowners who installed photovoltaic panels but had no comprehensive plan to dispose of them. Now, panels purchased under those programs are nearing the end of their 25-year lifecycle.
BTW, 2022-2006=16, quite different from 25.
[0] when you have something that is rated as lasting 20-25 years, it is not difficult to foresee that in 20-25 years (actually much earlier than that, as the lifecycle estimates tend to be generous) there will be the need of disposing (be it recycling/refurbishing/dumping) of that something.