President Obama speaks of “a planet in peril.” The president and the
brilliant people he appointed in energy and science know that we must
move rapidly to carbon-free energy to avoid handing our children a
planet that has passed climate tipping points.
The science is
clear. Burning all fossil fuels will destroy the future of young people
and the unborn. And the fossil fuel that we must stop burning is coal.
Coal is the critical issue. Coal is the main cause of climate change.
It is also the dirtiest fossil fuel — air pollution, arsenic, and
mercury from coal have devastating effects on human health and cause
birth defects.
We must make clear that we the people want a move toward a rapid phase-out of coal emissions now. |
Recently, the administration unveiled its new position on mountaintop
coal mining and set out a number of new restrictions on the practice in
six Appalachian states. These new rules will require tougher
environmental review before blowing up mountains. But it’s a minimal
step.
The Obama administration is being forced into a political compromise.
It has sacrificed a strong position on mountaintop removal in order to
ensure the support of coal-state legislators for a climate bill. The
political pressures are very real. But this is an approach to coal that
defeats the purpose of the administration’s larger efforts to fight
climate change, a sad political bargain that will never get us the
change we need on mountaintop removal, coal or the climate. Coal is the
linchpin in mitigating global warming, and it’s senseless to allow
cheap mountaintop-removal coal while the administration is
simultaneously seeking policies to boost renewable energy.
Mountaintop removal, which provides a mere 7 percent of the nation’s coal [1],
is done by clear-cutting forests, blowing the tops off of mountains,
and then dumping the debris into streambeds — an undeniably
catastrophic way of mining. This technique has buried more than 800 miles of
Appalachian streams in mining debris and by 2012 will have serious
damaged or destroyed an area larger than Delaware. Mountaintop removal
also poisons water supplies and pollutes the air with coal and rock
dust. Coal ash piles are so toxic and unstable that the Department of
Homeland Security has declared that the location of the nation’s 44
most hazardous coal ash sites must be kept secret. They fear terrorists
will find ways to spill the toxic substances. But storms and heavy rain
can do the same. A recent collapse in Tennessee released 100 times more
hazardous material than the Exxon-Valdez oil spill.
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