Its not. Its that the power company has to be able to have an easement to be able to conform to certain regulations. Like cutting the trees to make sure there are no power outages.
Yes and no. First, a history on poles. The reason we call them telephone poles is they were first used and paralleled train tracks and were called telegraph poles. This was pre 1900. Since then, electricity or power lines were strung up on these same poles and power poles, which are owned by the power company. If a pole has both power and telephone on them, they are called joint-use poles and utility companies that own the poles can charge other utilities to use them for a yearly fee per pole. Nowadays, most poles are joint use and carry power, telephone and cable television on them and unless your power is fed by underground or buried power lines, your computer gets the power it needs from these type poles. The exception to this is a battery powered laptop, but these still get recharged by the same source.
Only the wildlife that used the power plant site before it was built
Atop the power line poles.
Dangerous Power was created on 2007-06-29.
was carved into animal and human figures on tall fire poles. These poles were very colorful and were a symbol of a family's power and rank
many sources of power are dangerous if not handled with care some power sources are nuclear thermal
Six
The tree most commonly used to make power poles is southern pine in some areas of the United States.
Insulators.
Yes, its still the standard .45 grips.
Building dams can flood land and affect fish and wildlife
Any power source is dangerous to play with, apart from minor things like small dry batteries.