Mae dolenni erthyglau yn agor mewn tab newydd.
Bydd y rhan fwyaf o erthyglau yn Saesneg ac eithrio'r rhai a bostiwyd yn wreiddiol yn Gymraeg.
We can achieve net zero using only offshore wind. The Irish Sea alone can produce more energy than the whole of onshore Wales. We can transmit the energy long distances under the sea. We can get the energy to even the remotest farm using wooden poles or “ploughed in” cables. We can protect and conserve our landscapes for future generations. Everything is possible, but we’re not doing it Instead we are littering our hills and moorlands with industrial wind farms, and stringing them all together using 55 m high steel lattice pylons. Parhewch i ddarllen
RE-think’s Crowdfunder has gone live! https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/p/save-radnor-forest Contributions towards this are extremely important and we are very grateful to you for understanding how important this campaign is. Now we need to push on, and fast, with more donations, please. Every pound we receive is a pound towards fighting Bute on a professional level. We believe this is… Parhewch i ddarllen
by Jonathan F Dean North south pylons: a best estimate A substation is planned at Llandyfaelog, south of Carmarthen, for several mid Wales wind farms as well as the Celtic Sea wind farms. This is now known as South Wales West Connection Node C and will be a green energy hub. Lightsource have a wind/solar/storage… Parhewch i ddarllen
A story is unfolding in the the countryside of mid-Wales. It is the battle between a corporate company wanting to build a 60 mile line of pylons through the beautiful Towy Valley, and the landowners, local politicians and residents who do not want to see metal monsters marauding across the treasured, nature and history rich… Parhewch i ddarllen
This quote comes from Emma Pinchbeck (1) who is the incoming chief executive of the Climate Change Committee. There are many who would not share that view, particularly the residents of the Towy Valley who are facing the prospect of a 60 mile power line from Radnor Forest, near Llandrindod Wells, north of Carmarthenshire, to… Parhewch i ddarllen
The slogan for the controversial Tryweryn valley drowning (despite protests and opposition from local MPs against it), was Cofiwch Dryweryn (“Remember Tryweryn”) and this became a symbol reminding people not to forget the destruction of the landscape and the community. The wall on which the slogan is painted is an unofficial memorial to the event.… Parhewch i ddarllen