Could Your Roof Feed Wildlife Instead of Just Making Electricity?
Could Your Roof Feed Wildlife Instead of Just Making Electricity? “We’ve taught roofs to make electricity. Perhaps it’s time they helped nature too.” For years, I have looked at roofs mainly as wasted energy platforms. A roof used to be just the thing that kept the rain off. Then along came solar panels, and suddenly a roof became a small power station. In my case, with 26 solar panels, battery storage, a heat pump, and the Whaly electric boat being charged from home solar, the roof has already become part of a much bigger green system. But recently I have found myself wondering something else. What if a roof could do more than generate electricity? What if a roof could also slow rainwater, cool the building, feed insects, shelter birds, provide nesting places, and become part of a wildlife corridor? In other words: could your roof feed wildlife instead of just making electricity? And in my own case, the question becomes even more practical. My main roof is already busy m...