The essential 'clean coal' scam

Politico lets shill get away with the basic dodge at the center of the ‘clean coal’ campaign 5

The "clean coal" PR people are running a scam. Thing is, it’s an obvious scam—easily exposed, easily debunked. Just because it’s obvious, though, doesn’t mean the media won’t fall for it. Indeed, the entire "clean coal" propaganda push is premised on the media’s gullibility.

Here’s the scam: They leave the definition of "clean coal" deliberately ambiguous. As ACCCE spokesman Joe Lucas said on NPR the other day, "‘clean coal’ is an evolutionary term. "By "evolutionary," of course, he means, "whatever we need it to mean at the moment." If one meaning is attacked, they subtly shift to another meaning.

To begin with, remember the reason the "clean coal" PR was needed at all: climate change. Coal is the world’s principal contributor to climate change, as James Hansen (among others) keeps saying. Conversely,  efforts to fight climate change are the biggest threat to coal’s future. (Read this new Greenpeace rundown [PDF] of all the coal plants blocked or shut down in 2008, and the battles to come in 2009.)

As a response to climate change,  "clean coal"  refers to coal power plants that sequester their greenhouse gas emissions.

Unfortunately, that definition of "clean" collides with two awkward facts:

     
  1. There are no commercial coal power plants in the U.S. that actually sequester their emissions.
  2.  
  3. According to a new report out from the Center for American Progress, the companies funding "clean coal" PR aren’t spending much on carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) research.

  Despite its slogan that ACCCE companies made "a commitment to clean,"  a review of its member companies’ research programs found that they are making relatively insignificant investments in CCS compared with their profits. CAP’s analysis found that the 48 ACCCE companies made a combined profit of $57 billion in 2007 (See chart 2) while investing over several years only $3.5 billion in CCS research (See chart 1).  That means the companies combined made $17 in 2007 profits for every $1 invested in CCS research over several years. This is a very generous estimate, because the analysis includes several projects that haven’t yet begun. Nonetheless, the research funding over a number of years is dwarfed by the profits for a single year.

In other words: When it comes to climate change, there is no such thing as "clean coal," and coal companies aren’t getting much closer to it—or even trying particularly hard to do so.

When "clean coal" shills are pressed on this point, they revert to the other definition of "clean"—the notion that coal plants have reduced their emissions of traditional air pollutants like particulates and mercury (as opposed to greenhouse gases). This is a bit like low-tar cigarettes—they still kill plenty of people—but nonetheless, it’s defensibly true. Coal plants have measurably reduced the emission of these pollutants over the past few decades.

But that’s beside the point. The point is climate change.

To see how this flimflam works on a gullible media, let’s turn to 2008’s presumptive frontrunner for Most Gullible Journalist: Politico’s Erica Lovley. Kudos to Lovley for covering the CAP report—see "CAP report: Where’s the (coal) money?"—but have a look at the response she lets Lucas get away with:

  The coal industry sharply disputes Weiss’s figures. The group says it has invested more than $50 billion in emission-reducing technology over the past 30 years and currently has more than 80 projects on clean coal technology underway.

Note the essential wiggle: "emission-reducing technology." Not GHG-reducing technology. So Lucas is trying to use Big Coal’s investments in traditional air pollutant scrubbers (investments which, incidentally, have been mandated by law against great resistance) as defense against an accusation about its lack of investment in GHG reducing technology.

It’s a transparent scam, tantamount to saying: "the coal industry acknowledges Weiss’s figures, but desperately wants to change the subject."

But does Lovley point this obvious fact out? Does she expose the dodge at the core of the "clean coal" campaign?

No, no, that would be "editorializing." Or exercising a modicum of "judgment." Or displaying evidence of minimal "critical faculties." Instead it’s all bland he-said she-said, Weiss’s claims vs. coal’s claims ... even though coal is not actually disputing Weiss’s figures.

This is why propaganda works.

David Roberts is staff writer for Grist. You can follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/drgrist.

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  1. Ted Nace's avatar

    Ted Nace Posted 7:56 am
    23 Dec 2008

    This is a sharp pieceDeserves to be seen in places like Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, PR Watch, and Columbia Journalism Review's "Behind the News."

    Help build CoalSwarm-- a shared informational resource on coal and alternatives to coal.
  2. biodiversivist's avatar

    biodiversivist Posted 8:19 am
    23 Dec 2008

    Yes sir, this is sharpand I think Lovley is in over her head again.

    In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world
  3. Jonas Posted 2:06 am
    24 Dec 2008

    CCS saves mankindDavid, nice of you to quote James Hansen. If you have read his 350 paper, you know that CCS is crucial to save mankind's behind.
    The technology is safe, tested and reliable. That's not the question. There are several commercial plants up and running across the world.
    The point is that we need to develop CCS in order to couple it to bioenergy, so that we can generate carbon-negative energy -- which is what we need to actively remove CO2 from the atmosphere.
    It seems like you often forget this. CCS coupled to bioenergy is the key to the climate fight. No other renewable energy technology is carbon-negative. They all remain carbon-neutral at best. And we know carbon-neutrality is not nearly enough. We need to go from 387ppm to 350ppm CO2. You know this.
  4. amazingdrx Posted 2:37 am
    24 Dec 2008

    Coal train in, CO2 train outThe liquid CO2 train would be twice the size of the coal train?  Is that correct?  What happens when the CO2 train crashes?
    The CO2 gas hovers along the ground in a cloud that kills all the humans and animals in its path.
    What happens if the CO2 pumped underground leaks, all at once from an earthquake?  Same thing.
    How much more coal needs to be mined to make up for the energy used to separate and liquify the cO2?  40%? And rail miles traveled by CO2 trains, and fossil fuel used in mining and transportation? 100%?  
    CCS is a mirage.  An imaginary GHG oasis hallucinated by fevered minds in the employ of the coal industry.  As the mighty Costanza said, "It's not a lie if YOU believe it."

    http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin
  5. Pompey Road Posted 10:14 am
    24 Dec 2008

    Green Slime:Green Algae looks promising and may be a better fix. CCS will not work because we can't hollow out enough cavern space to store all we are creating and the expense of hauling it around or transporting it will make it cost prohibited. I have seen some examples of where algae is being used to some limited success. The stuff eats co2 and burps oxygen and sounds perfect. I don't know how we are going to handle the first algae pond that fails? Of course it may be more environmentally sound to be slimed than covered up with a toxic mix of coal sludge from the slurry ponds. The peripheral issues such as coal waste water and Mountain Top removal always take a back seat to co2 emissions.  The native Appalachians will never be able to contain either.

         Exploited from the beginning of the last century when the coal and mineral was snatched up by North East interest and then John Mayo's broad form deed stole the land. Most politicians from the area are coal corporation and bought for. The rest live on the crumbs that fall from the coal company table in the form of mining related jobs although they are becoming fewer since MTR and regular strip mining is less labor intensive.  If the rest of the nation does not stop these two practices I am afraid the sparse population and voting base of Appalachia will never overcome the Coal Corporation lobby  to stop MTR and sludge ponds.



    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.

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