Then add the energy costs to drill a well/dig a hole, as well as the manufacturing costs of that steel needed to make a rig, electronics, etc. Let's see exactly what's in fracking fluid so we can tell if we're poisoning our aquifers and small towns close to development. Let's make electrical generation companies actually clean up their ash ponds rather than walk away, and let's be sure to get our two pounds of flesh out of renewable companies too.
Equal is equal. The blade issue is being solved. Just as methane emissions from flared wells can be solved, coal ash can be cleaned up, etc.
I'm staunchly against industrial scale development on public lands. That means all development, not just some. I'm also pragmatic enough to realize that it's going to happen, wildlife will continue to lose, and if we don't make the industries responsible for our existence, as well as our unwise use of resources, then we've given away our greatest treasures without any kind of recompense and our future generations will rightly hate us.
All sounds great, until rubber meets the road.
We outsource our energy to countries who have no concept of "clean". Not to mention, we have become entirely too comfortable sending other people's kids to patrol and fight over it.
From what I've read, we've outsourced wind tech, to China, and I'll assume panels as well.
Then we fancy ourselves as environmentally conscious because we can't see it so it doesn't exist.
Now, someone decided that drilling is pollution, but strip mining for cobalt and nickel, in foreign countries is good.
We don't live in a vaccum. Outsourcing energy, and the manufacturing of it's components to 3rd world, or despotic regimes, produced more pollution, not less.
I'm not anti solar panel. But you could put panels down the barrow pit, on bridges etc, on every highway in the country, and not need to destroy any more land.
We are in court now, over corner crossing. A remnant of "what we need" as a country centuries ago, because we didn't care about consequences for the future.
We ought to try and learn something.
Luckily we had TR, who didn't just go along with the narrative and politics of the day, or none of us would be hunters.