Prayers -- answered!

Air Force drops plans to build liquid coal plant 3

Perhaps somebody heard my plea to kill the Air Force liquid coal plant.  McClatchy reports:

The Air Force rejected the plans for the coal-to-liquids plant because of possible conflicts with the 341 Missile Wing’s nuclear mission. The release said the concerns included decreased security near the base’s weapons storage area,  interference with missile transportation and “explosive safety arcs and operational flight safety issues.”

Not to mention that liquid coal is an environmental abomination with impossible economics used primarily by the desperate and isolated:

The main users and producers of fuel from coal have been South Africa and Nazi Germany.

Still you’ll be delighted to know that the Air Force is already using the fuel of the Third Reich and apartheid:

The Air Force has a goal to certify that all aircraft could fly on a 50-50 blend of fuel by 2011. It’s been purchasing fuel made from coal from Sasol of South Africa, most recently 300,000 gallons, said Air Force spokesman Gary Strasburg.

The B1, B52 and C-17 already have been certified to run on the coal-mix blend, and the F-15, F-22, C-5 and KC-135 all have also used the blend,  Strasburg said.

Makes sense.  Liquid cold drives up greenhouse gas emissions, which lead inevitably to massive environmental refugees and military conflict of water, energy, arable land, and food, according to U.S. intelligence agencies (see here).

National security gets trumped by job security in this full employment plan for the liquid-coal military industrial complex.

It remains worth noting that, as Greenwire ($ub. req’d) explains:

Section 526 of the 2007 energy bill bars federal agencies from buying alternative or synthetic fuels if they have higher lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions than conventional petroleum fuels.

That should be fatal to essentially all fossil-based unconventional fuels, and most especially liquid coal.

This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Joseph Romm is the editor of Climate Progress and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress.

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  1. Whiskerfish Posted 4:48 pm
    02 Feb 2009

    Sasolhas wrecked large areas of my country for its opencast coal mines (which are now generating acid mine drainage) and produced lord-knows-how-much acid rain. Just for fun, its plant at Secunda is the largest point source of greenhouse gases in the southern hemisphere.
    And now your airforce is boosting Sasol profits.
    (As if we didn't have enough trouble with our own stupid politicians backing this madness...)
    Whiskerfish
  2. Pompey Road Posted 12:05 am
    03 Feb 2009

    W.Va. Plant: The CTL plant for Williamson W.Va. is still on the drawing board. I guess the new concept will be to take the coal to liquid fuel to southern Appalachia. If you can hide such environmental disasters as Mountain Top Removal and the coal slurry sludge ponds you can hide out with your CTL plants.
    They won't add much environmental damage to a place that is being stripped bare anyway.

    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.
  3. sindark's avatar

    sindark Posted 5:49 am
    04 Feb 2009

    Good newsThis is very encouraging news, though the question remains of how the Air Force (and armed forces generally) will deal with the medium-term threat of peak oil.

    a sibilant intake of breath

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