A dirty lie

Waterkeeper Alliance unveils anti-coal campaign 4

The essay below was written by Steve Fleischli and Scott Edwards of Waterkeeper Alliance.

Right now the coal industry is engaged in a multi-million-dollar campaign propagating the lie that coal and so-called clean-coal technology are the answer to America’s future energy needs. Nothing could be farther from the truth. There is no such thing as clean coal.

Waterkeeper programs in Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Utah, and West Virginia have been fighting the coal industry for years.  Now, they have joined together with the nearly 200 programs of Waterkeeper Alliance in a grassroots campaign called “The Dirty Lie”—because none of us can afford to wait another minute to start creating a new national energy policy that frees us from a reliance on fossil fuels.

You don’t have to live in the coal fields or in the shadow of a coal-fired power plant to be affected by this filthy industry—coal causes acid rain, pollutes our water and food chain with mercury, and is grossly accelerating climate change. From mining it to the disposal of ash after it’s burned, there is no part of the coal industry that is good for the environment, good for people, or good for America.

Every year, the 1,100 coal-fired power plants in America spew 48 tons of toxic mercury into our air, poisoning hundreds of square miles of rivers, lakes and streams, accumulating in fish, and entering our bodies through fish consumption.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that one of every six women of childbearing age now has unsafe mercury levels in her blood and, potentially, breast milk, putting more than 410,000 American children born each year at high risk for neurological damage and a grim inventory of illnesses.

And while coal-fired power plants generate about half of America’s electricity, they contribute 80 percent of the total greenhouse gases from electricity production that cause global warming.  Yet, even if carbon capture and sequestration technology existed to remove these emissions, it still wouldn’t make coal clean.

From cradle to grave, coal is inherently filthy. Coal mining, no matter how it’s done, devastates the environment and communities. Toxins from coal-fired power plants are spewed into our air and leach into our water, causing asthma, cancer and over 24,000 premature deaths each year. And just recently, in Tennessee, we all saw the catastrophic effects from the failure of one coal-ash impoundment on surrounding watersheds and communities.

The coal industry also is responsible for the destruction of mountains, forests and streams throughout Appalachia, where mountaintop removal is poisoning water supplies, devastating hundreds of square miles of North America’s most ancient and biologically diverse hardwood forests, and permanently impoverishing local communities.

At the current pace, the coal industry will have decimated a piece of Appalachia the size of Delaware—more than 1.4 million acres—by the end of the next decade. Imagine if instead of cutting down one more mountain or burying one more stream to support our coal addiction we instead installed solar panels on a fraction of our homes.

Yes, even harnessing renewable energy has some impact, but it isn’t the endless litany of harm that mining coal creates.  Renewable energy is a gift that keeps on giving.  A pile of coal is burned and only gives back polluted water, contaminated fish and tainted land.

The truth is that with responsible leadership and investment in clean, renewable sources of energy, coal is replaceable; the Appalachian Mountains and the people that live there aren’t.  A national energy policy that continues to rely on fossil fuels endangers our health, environment, economic prosperity and national security.  Renewable-energy technologies that can meet America’s energy needs are already available.

Putting an end to the dirty lie that coal can be the foundation of America’s energy future is a critically important first step on the path to developing a new energy policy that stops global warming, protects our environment, and promotes energy efficiency and a sustainable energy future.  Visit www.thedirtylie.com and help spread the word.

Fleischli is president of the alliance, while Edwards serves as the group’s legal director.

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  1. Pompey Road Posted 11:37 am
    04 Mar 2009

    Graveyard Coal:annnnnd! You forgot wet sludge ponds in Appalachia form the coal cleaning process. You got all the heavy metals plus the chemicals used in seperating the soil, clay from the coal. Some of the MTR's and stripping is even being done on federal flood control projects in Appalachia. The Corps of Engineers let them strip the watershed area of the Fishtrap Dam in Pike County Ky..
    Most of the coal and a lot of the coal corporations are owned by out of state interest. The people of Ky. and W.Va. get very little money generated back into the local economy.

    The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.
  2. robin giampa Posted 7:11 am
    05 Mar 2009

    Clean coal is a farceI'm not even sure where to start... there is a whole lot wrong with a campaign that sings the praises of coal and how it's mined.  Thank you Steve and Scott for both the thoughtful piece and the firm stance on this issue.  Who on earth is that clean coal campaign targeted to?  Are there actually people who are unsure if coal is good or bad -- and don't realize there are alternatives?  I don't disagree that coal had it's place in our history and served a purpose at one time, but we have come an awfully long way since then.  So many people and companies are making great strides with their use of alternative energy -- even in the absense of a cap on emissions.  Why?  Because in a lot of cases it makes good business sense.  We use renewable energy at our factory and distribution centers, and in most of those cases we're saving money.  I think as big business realizes that there is real, bottom-line value in being environmentally responsible, the coal industry will have no choice but to innovate its own practices.
    Robin Giampa

    Timberland
  3. randino Posted 10:36 am
    05 Mar 2009

    Problems in the Rust BeltI fear that any national legislative effort to enact cap and trade, or any meaningful climate legislation is going to be sabotaged by US representatives and senators from states such as Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Michigan ie the old Rust Belt - regardless of  party affiliation.  
    They are so petrified in fear that climate legislation will drive another nail into their economic coffins, that they will resist any meaningful climate legislation.
    In the Rust Belt, all the calendars lie. From the elite to the street, there is a palatable desire to return to the good old days of factories belching smoke from coal. These are states not only of the union, but of nostalgia. I sometimes think that what we have is not a problem of economics or politics, it is a problem of culture and a deficit of imagination. Reasoned arguments on why green jobs will result from getting off the fossil fuel fix, will fall on deaf ears. Such arguments seem like pie in the sky to the populace of this region. They don't know wind and solar. They know coal, and will stick to what they know because their backs are against the wall.
    Bet on it. The Rust Belt will join the Republicans and will sink climate legislation, once again.
    Randy Cunningham

    Cleveland, OH

    Randy Cunningham
  4. oceanrev's avatar

    oceanrev Posted 9:17 pm
    05 Mar 2009

    no more coalThere are good reasons even my 4 year old daughter fears coal in her stocking on Christmas morning...

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