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Does the President's 'Clean Coal' Glibness Turn American Citizens Into Acceptable Collateral Damage?
No American leader has done more to advance a clean energy future than President Obama. Nor has any American president done more to invoke a mandate for stricter workplace safety and environmental regulations.
And yet, ever since President Obama first visited my native southern Illinois coalfields in 1997 on a golf outing with a fellow state legislator, he has seemingly failed to grasp the staggering human and environmental toll of coal mining and coal burning on our coalfield communities--and ultimately, the nation.
Regardless of how cap' n' trade and carbon cap' n' storage schemes pan out in the far-flung future for coal-fired plants, there is one indisputable truth about "clean coal": It will ramp up deadly strip mining and underground coal mining production by an estimated 25-30 percent.
Clean coal, therefore, is not just words. It's a death sentence for coalfield communities.
And every time our President glibly spins "clean coal," he does not simply offend black lung-afflicted and injured coal miners and their families in the American coalfields; he disregards the mounting death toll from "real coal."
Makes you wonder: Does President Obama's glibness, for whatever reasons of practicality or politics, turn American citizens into acceptable collateral damage in a confounding defense of our nation's dirty energy policy?
Even a cursory look into the history of coal mining in his adopted state of Illinois--the proclaimed "Saudi Arabia of Coal"--would inform the President that hopelessness in the American coalfields has been wedded to a mind-boggling death toll.
On the President's first trip to the southern Illinois coalfields in 1997, as part of a golf junket, the coal company executives pounded nails into the green to keep the eternal springtime of coal alive. They played the nostalgia trump card, conjuring images of great lines of coal trains and tipples, and huge ranks of coal miners emerging out of the depths of the earth in an endless parade of employment opportunities. They heralded the coming of "clean coal" technology.
But nostalgia, like denial, is a deadly game.
No one on that golf course would have paused for a moment, pointed to a landmark a few miles away to the south, and recalled an explosion on the last working day before Christmas in 1951, when mining safety violations were ignored and a buildup of methane gas ripped through the nearby New Orient No. 2 mine and took the lives of 119 miners.
More than 104,000 miners in America have died in coal mines since 1900. Every day, three coal miners still die from black lung disease; over 10,000 miners, according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, died in the last decade. In the meantime, the external economic costs of the Black Lung Program have saddled taxpayers with billions of dollars. The injuries and deaths caused by overburdened coal trucks continue to pile up.
Miners are not the only Americans to suffer from the dangerous pollutants, including mercury, that filter into our air and water from the mines. According to the American Lung Association, 24,000 Americans die prematurely from coal-fired plant pollution each year. Another 550,000 asthma attacks, 38,000 heart attacks, and 12,000 hospital admissions are also attributed to coal- red plants. An Environmental Protection Agency study found that long-term exposure to "particulate matter of 2.5 microns and smaller (Pm2.5)," which coal-fired plants contributed, "shortens the average lifespan by 14 years."
When the Obama administration released a previously held 2002 study carried out by the Environmental Protection Agency on the dangers of toxic coal-ash ponds, Charleston Gazette reporter Ken Ward noted: "The EPA estimates that 1 in 50 nearby residents could get cancer from exposure to arsenic leaking into drinking water wells from unlined waste ponds that mix ash with coal refuse. Threats are also posed by high levels of other metals, including boron, sele- nium and lead."
Not that our President has ever been unaware of the deadly effects of coal.
The dinosaur Fisk Generating Station in his adopted city of Chicago billows out thousands of tons of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and carbon dioxide emissions, as well as 117 tons of particulate matter that led to hundreds of heart attacks and thousands of asthma attacks every year.
But the President's disregard for the casualties of coal are part of a historical pattern.
The coal industry golf pros surrounding Obama in 1997 most likely didn't tell the young state senator that their fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers had carried on this same conversation with politicians from Chicago for the past century; that "clean coal" has been sold as a slogan since the 1890s. That by 1905, virtually all southern Illinois mineral rights had been bought up by a torrent of Chicago speculators and coal operators, relegating the region to the vassal status of a supply-and-demand extraction colony subject to the whims of the senator's own constituents.
No one probably confessed to the fact that the region's coal industry had peaked in 1918. Over 100,000 miners produced more than 100 million tons in the early 1920s; a little more than 3,000 miners churned out 30 million tons today.
By the 1930s, according to a government report, those same Chicago coal companies had abandoned the region and left a picture of "almost unrelieved, utter economic devastation." As one of the most depressed and vulnerable places in the country, the southern Illinois coalfields had been given over to "hopeless poverty."
That same sense of hopelessness, of being abandoned by a government beholden to the whims of outside Big Coal companies still resonates today.
Out of the 1,300 mines that had been opened in the state of Illinois, less than 25 remained by the end of the twentieth century, leaving the federal and state governments with a bill for billions of dollars to clean up the dangerous sites and toxic waste seeping into the region's watersheds. Thousands of fertile farmland acres and lush Shawnee forests have been strip-mined and left to the unmanaged spoils of weeds, foreign grasses, and sterile creeks. Cancer and health problems soar. The coal miners, too, have been abandoned: Their town squares and schools are boarded up; their hard-earned property values have wiped out in the boom-bust cycles of a single economy.
This is the real cost of the President's "clean coal" rhetoric for American citizens in the coalfields: Dirty coal has remained the merciless king, and the land and its residents must defend themselves against the daily onslaught of the monarch's extraction for more wealth.
That is a historical crime that deserves a real solution, a clean energy future--not something we should discuss glibly as "clean coal."
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13 Comments so far
Show AllFor anybody who can get hold of and rent this particular film, the documentary film "Harlan County USA" is a very, very good documentary film that gives excellent insight on the coal-mining business, the unsafe conditions that coal-miners must work under, and the consequences of coal-mining (*i. e. black-lung, asthma, etc), itself. It's a devastating film, but it needs to be seen by EVERYBODY, from our top polliticians on down to the average, run of the mill individual.
Bigger's assertion that "No American leader has done more to advance a clean energy future than President Obama. Nor has any American President done more to invoke a mandate for stricter workplace safety and environmental regulations" is pure fantasy ! To wit:
Clean energy:
While Obama has done more than Dubya to advance a clean energy future, his positive contributions don't equal those of Carter's or Franklin Roosevelt's. If you juxtapose Obama's dirty energy contributions (nuclear, coal, war expansion for example) with the positive clean energy contributions Obama compares even worse.
Workplace safety and environmental regulations:
Invoking a mandate is not the same as enacting and enforcing legislation. Even if Obama actually implements the mandates he has invoked he will still fall short of Roosevelt's, Nixon's and Carter's accomplishments in workplace safety and fall short of Nixon's and Carter's environmental accomplishments.
" Obama has done more than Dubya to advance a clean energy future"
Really?? Since when?
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
"Does the President's 'Clean Coal' Glibness Turn American Citizens Into Acceptable Collateral Damage?"
Yes, as does the $54 Billion dollars he wants to loan utilities giants to build the first new generation of unsafe nuclear power plants in 30 years.
How many windmills, solar panels, solar water heaters, geothermal wells, tidal power plants, high speed trains, electric cars and other green energy products and jobs could the trillions going to cancer forever increasing nukes finance?
Cicero was a two-faced, ass-kissing dirtbag.
The US will begin developing windmills, solar, geothermal plants, etc. as soon as enough Wall Streeters can work out a way to privatize enough of the commons to make it pay. Add desalination plants for the West Coast, so they don't bleed the Rockies dry. Projects such as those cited by ezeflyer are all under development in Europe and Asia. Meanwhile, the efforts in the US are a joke.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Cicero was the only Roman politician of any stature during the last days of the Republic who publicly spoke truth to power--even arguing against past legal decisions of Julius Caesar before Julius Caesar's court and typically winning his case. He had the courage, utterly lacking in the vast majority of contemporary American politicians, to publicly come out against the looming threat of dictatorship and he paid the price for it--something very few Americans (pols or not) are willing to do on any account anymore.
I just heard on the news that President Obama is having 3 new nuclear power plants built in GA. They will be given a government loan of 8 billion dollars. Yet, the problem I have with President Obama pushing nuclear energy is what do we do with the waste? I don't really consider nuclear energy a clean energy source anymore than clean coal. Both are a lie. I just think we are heading down a dangerous path and there are better ways than nuclear.
Considering that " pay as you go" is Obama's new plan....how are we GOing to Pay?
Perhaps, the thing to do is ban "junkets." Perhaps "fact finding missions" should be replaced with FIELD TRIPS.
Michelle Obama could handle this. Take the girls for a week to West Virginia. hear and see the power of the "rockets red glare," while mountains burst in the air. Live with a miner family for a week, and oh, don't drink the water.
Perhaps the "Shock and Awe' of Three Mile Island would be another good field trip. Maybe you'd better get health care passed first, after seeing the continuing, and never ending , on-going destruction from Chrenobyl It will be terribly interesting to see just WHOSE neighborhood these nuclear plants go into, and is eminent domain a part of this?
I have read that dinosaurs weren't all that smart, but they did hang around for 300 million years, no? I wonder how long we'll be on the planet?
Mass murder going on decade after decade.
The Great Horrendous Lie of the ages in this world is that one can murder and get away with it.
Respect will wash this world clean, so great its power. It's coming.
A look at corporate contractor documents for such things would be educational were the public to have the opportunity.
Executives make these decisions based on lo$$-benefit to stockholders, pending of course the provisions those stockholders have made for the executives themselves.
This is done straightforwardly. A certain amount of money is assigned a human life. This is based on an actuarial estimate of what wrongful death is apt to cost the corporation. So long-term disability, for instance, costs more than death.
Of course, if you think we all cost the same amount of money or that power executives are unaware of the differences or unwilling to take them into consideration, think again.
"No American leader has done more to advance a clean energy future than President Obama."
Gee, Jeff Biggers, what would that be? Surely you're not talking about his en-masse approval of mountaintop removal mining or his full-bore support of massive adventurism over carbon resources the lands of oil and gas and pipelines.
Pardon the tone, but this is not a rhetorical question: what are you talking about?
"No American leader has done more to advance a clean energy future than President Obama." I do not understand this claim. The TVA and other water power projects were not perfect, and had some unintended consequences, but I think they trump anything done recently.
I cannot think of a single thing Obama has done that distinguishes him from recent administrations. He has gotten rid of Van Jones, endorsed the mythical "clean coal", proferred loans for nuclear plants. We are the chief obstructionist to setting international standards. We still have no long term solution for carbon emissions, coal slag and nuclear waste. These pollutants will keep piling up in poor neighborhoods where nobody important lives and then spilling out into the rivers and oceans and the biosphere to affect future generations.
Have I missed something? Perhaps the author is referring to plans for high speed rail. That is the only possibility I can recall. I believe that is offset by failure to support existing mass transit systems and letting them struggle to survive, letting them cut service and raise prices, thus pushing people toward use of cars. Are there loans and grants for research or development initiatives around solar or wind or tidal or anything else really clean? Are there actions and plans that have slipped by me unnoticed? These are sincere questions.
Joe