Friday roundup, Feb. 12, 2010

February 12, 2010 by Ken Ward Jr.

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In a Friday, January 29, 2010 photo, Spencer Nanigha, a firefighter with Hopi Fire Department breaks up coal to be transported to stranded Hopis without fuel to heat their homes in Kykotsmovi on the Hopi Reservation. Hopi and Navajo people are still stranded in their homes from snow and mud-ridden roads a week after a major winter storm. Continued inclement weather has made recovery and rescue efforts difficult. (AP Photo/ The Arizona Republic, David Wallace)

Lots of interesting takes on current coal industry controversies this week, starting with a Huffington Post commentary by William S. Becker of the Presidential Climate Action Project,  about President Obama, “clean coal” and the future of the Appalachian coalfields.

Becker is one of those folks — often criticized by Coal Tattoo readers  — who think coal ought not be part of America’s energy future. Many of my readers won’t agree with what he has to say, but it’s one of the more thoughtful arguments brought forth from that side of the table. Here’s part of it:

As the dirtiest and the most abundant of fossil fuels, coal is a dangerous bridge to a clean energy economy. 

How has the president who vowed to restore America’s leadership on climate change become coal’s First Friend? One explanation may be the advice he is receiving from his inner circle — Emanuel, Axelrod, Gibbs and Jarrett — political savants who may assume that expedient politics is the same as good public policy. According to an analysis by Edward Luce in Financial Times, Obama may be relying on these four advisors far more than he listens to his talented Cabinet, including Secretary Chu. None of the four is an energy expert, and it shows in Obama’s position on coal.

For example, if our objective is jobs, renewable energy technologies have been found to produce more than fossil fuels. Coal is not our “most bountiful natural resource.” Assuming the President was referring to energy resources, that honor goes to sunlight. We have a 7 billion year supply. The fuel is free and we don’t have to blow the tops off of mountains to get it. Collecting sunlight doesn’t kill rivers, contaminate groundwater, make people sick or destroy their culture, as is happening today, every day, in the rape of Appalachia. We don’t have to capture the sun’s greenhouse gas emissions because it doesn’t produce any. So if abundance, cost, jobs and low carbon are our criteria, then the money we’re dumping into coal should be invested in pre-fossilized solar energy.

Instead, Obama is taking the path of least political resistance — the position that to meet America’s energy appetite all our supply options must be on the table. With respect, that’s a cop-out designed to evade hard choices and to keep coal-state congressmen pacified. If we assume we do not have enough taxpayer money to subsidize all supply options and if we want to simultaneously achieve energy independence, economic vitality, global competitiveness and greater national security while managing the risks of climate change, then some options need to come off the table as quickly as possible . One of them is coal.

It’s worth noting that there isn’t much indication that Obama agrees with Becker, and in fact his essay plays off an encounter the President had with Gillian Caldwell of the anti-coal group 1Sky. Here’s the video of that discussion:

Also, earlier this week, The New York Times distributed a Greenwire piece that examined the role coal issues are playing in the re-election campaigns of West Virginia Reps. Nick J. Rahall and Alan Mollohan:

Since last June, Republicans have been using a vote in favor of the House energy and climate bill as ammunition against vulnerable Democrats in the upcoming 2010 midterm election.

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But Republicans in West Virginia are going one step further and using the cap-and-trade bill to target two veteran Democrats who actually voted against the bill: Reps. Nick Rahall and Alan Mollohan.

Although the filing deadline only closed recently, potential challengers are already attacking the incumbents over coal issues. And Republican state officials argue that voters are starting to believe that their representatives are not doing enough to protect their interests.

This story came just after the release of a Gallup Poll which showed West Virginians giving President Obama his third-worst job approval rating among the states. The AP’s Larry Messina reported on that in his Lincoln Walks at Midnight blog.

I’m not sure how I missed this, but Bill Estep of the Lexington Herald-Leader had a very lengthy story on Sunday, Jan. 31, about a University of Kentucky study aimed at finding a way for coal companies to dispose of waste rock and dirt without destroying downstream water quality. Here’s the lead and nut graphs:

A shallow, winding stream in Breathitt County could play a role in the future of Appalachian surface mining, showing a different way to reclaim watersheds than the approach coal companies have used for three decades.

That’s because until just over a year ago, there was no stream at the site in Robinson Forest — just a flat of crushed, compacted rock.

It was a hollow fill, where a company had dumped millions of tons of rock blasted from a hill while uncovering coal. The fill buried headwater channels that had carried water down to a stream called Laurel Fork.

Researchers from the University of Kentucky built a new stream and wetlands atop the fill and planted vegetation and trees to figure out how to restore a headwater stream system after surface mining.

The project at Guy Cove is still in the early stages, but the results have been promising so far, researchers said.

The stream is stable, vegetation such as bulrush and sedge has taken root and trees planted nearby are doing well. Frogs, salamanders and lots of tiny bugs such as mayflies — whose presence is an indicator of stream health — use the stream and wetlands.

And tests have shown the quality of the water in the engineered creek is better than in the water draining out of the fill elsewhere, said Christopher D. Barton, one of the UK professors involved in the research.

“From the water quality perspective … the results are very encouraging,” said Barton, a forest hydrologist.

Now, before my coal industry readers start jumping on this bandwagon, it’s important to note that no results of this research have yet been finished or published any any scientific journals.

The Herald-Leader story includes lots of quotes from EPA’s Greg Pond and from the University of Maryland’s Margaret Palmer, describing their work documenting the water quality damage being done by surface mining.

But my take is — after reading it through a couple of times — the Herald-Leader could have done more to explain to his readers the current state of the science on these issues, represented in the Science journal article published in early January. It would be easy for folks in the coal industry to say, “See, we can rebuild streams, what’s the big deal” or for casual readers to find the story to be a bit of a ping-pong match between scientists.

The U.K. work seems significant, and it could provide some very valuable guidance for surface mining … but it’s too soon yet to say for sure. Still, it’s got my attention, and I sent out some inquiries to U.K. yesterday to find out more about their work.

And in other coal news and commentary:

– The fine folks at Counterpunch published a piece about black lung that is worth a read. Here’s part of it:

As dangerous an undertaking as coal mining is, there’s no comparison between the risks of cave-ins or flooding or explosions, and the risks of contracting this deadly disease.  In the last decade alone, 10,000 miners have died from black lung, compared with fewer than 400 from mine accidents.

What was most alarming about NIOSH’s findings was the number of younger miners—those in their thirties and forties—found to be suffering from black lung.  That these younger miners didn’t begin their careers until after passage of the landmark 1969 Coal Mine Health and Safety Act (which established strict coal-dust standards)—the law designed to prevent black lung—shows that something is very wrong.  

And:

There are several theories for the rise of black lung:  Miners are being forced to work longer hours, thus exposing themselves to more dust at a given stretch; more efficient machinery is being used, creating finer and greater volumes of dust; and with the demand for coal and the price of energy rising dramatically, mines thought to have been “panned out” are being reopened.  These mines have smaller seams of coal which require cutting through more rock to get to, which, in turn, creates more deadly dust (respirable crystalline silica).

But one statistic that cannot be denied is the correlation between the increase in black lung and the decrease in union membership, and that correlation, while disappointing, should come as no surprise.  No one—not the government, not the media, not the company—knows or cares more about the welfare of a coal miner than a miners’ collective.  And those collectives are being phased out.

– Coal Tattoo readers who have been commenting about export coal and China might find this piece interesting,  and I would also recommend this piece from Yale Environment 360 about the U.S. race with China over clean energy, and this one by Andy Revkin about what happens with CO2 accounting when coal flows from one country to another.

– Also along those lines, The Wall Street Journal did a piece about how Coal India Ltd., the world’s largest coal producer, may invest about $2 billion over the next four years to buy stakes in overseas coal assets, as it wants to boost local availability of the fuel to meet rapidly rising demand.

– The New York Times distributed this Greenwire piece: British Columbia won’t allow energy and mineral exploration in the headwaters of Glacier National Park.

– And, following up on the big deal for FirstEnergy to buy Allegheny Energy,  the Wall Street Journal ties that transaction to what it says are the slim chances of a climate change legislation passing Congress this year.

Finally, my buddy Jim Bruggers at the Louisville Courier Journal posted some nice video of my friend Kathy Mattea, who during the anti-mountaintop removal rally in Frankfort, Ky., yesterday repeated her call for a “civil conversation” about coal issues here in Appalachia. At the end, she sings Jean Ritchie’s “Black Waters.” Here’s the link.

And, because it’s almost the weekend, here’s some video of the original version:

10 Responses to “Friday roundup, Feb. 12, 2010”

  1. cindy rank says:

    You neglected to quote the following very important sentence in Bill Estep ‘s Lexington Herald-Leader article on Sunday, Jan. 31, about the University of Kentucky study aimed at finding a way for coal companies to fill stream valleys without destroying downstream water quality:

    “The uppermost part of the original headwater area remained on the ridge above the fill because the coal seam played out so the company didn’t mine that spot, Barton said.”

    This untouched portion of headwaters feeding the constructed portion of the stream in the lower reaches may be an important factor in test results that “have shown the quality of the water in the engineered creek is better than in the water draining out of the fill elsewhere, …”

    The Palmer, Pond, Passmore and a myriad of other studies all stress the importance of these tiny headwater reaches, but they are normally filled/eliminated/buried as part of the overall mining process.

  2. Ken Ward Jr. says:

    Thanks, Cindy … that’s a great point. Ken.

  3. Casey says:

    And here’s what Al Gore is excited about. Chicken what?
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/environment/2010-02-10-cheap-carbon_N.htm

  4. Casey says:

    Cindy,
    Regardless of the amount of disturbance above the reconstructed stream, the results are still extremely encouraging. Is the water input to this reconstructed stream better than the rainfall that creates it? Perhaps keeping the runoff water from infiltrating the fill is one of the key parts.

    If a reconstructed stream on a valley fill has mayflies, frogs and salamanders, can it still be said that it has never been done?

  5. Bill Howley says:

    I was not surprised to see the WSJ article about the FirstEnergy/Allegheny deal that you linked to above. I was convinced from the moment I heard the story that the timing of the deal was connected to the collapse of Senate carbon legislation.

    FirstEnergy saw that carbon emissions in the US will remain free for the foreseeable future and that there is no political will to do anything for at least the next 10 years. Coal-fired power plants are heavily subsidized by state and federal regulators who turn a blind eye to already illegal environmental impacts. Why wouldn’t a smart company want to snap up some of the biggest coal-fired plants in the US?

    Cap and trade is a charade that only benefits the big investment bankers and traders. Only a carbon tax which is then 100% refunded to all citizens, as proposed by NASA scientist James Hansen, can really reduce carbon emissions and provide people with the money to invest in their own solar and wind energy systems.

    As experts in the VA PATH case testified, we may be on the verge of a massive new expansion of coal-fired power plants if PJM and FERC succeed in creating a national mega-transmission line network. The FirstEnergy/Allegheny merger may be one of the first steps in this process.

  6. Greenspace says:

    Bill,

    Agreed that a carbon tax would be preferable to cap and trade. It cuts Wall Street profits out, and adds more certainty regarding cost. But the $ should be dedicated strictly to development of clean energy, rather than refunded to consumers. Carbon refunds to consumers are politically appealing, but would simply be offset by higher energy bills. Costs must inevitably rise for both energy producers and consumers in order to achieve lower carbon energy. The most direct approach to paying for it would be the most cost-effective appproach.

  7. Bill Howley says:

    Anything that gets through the US Senate will have to be “politically appealing.” Taking tax money from carbon producers and investing it directly in new technologies may be a great idea, but it will never get through Congress.

    Refunding the tax to consumers will also allow the consumers themselves to invest in the real energy technologies of the future — locally based distributed generation.

    It is probably not a good idea to have the government decide who invests in new energy technologies. Big Coal would simply be replaced by Big Wind, Solar, etc. The problem is with “big.” We need small generation sources close to where power is needed, not mega projects that require insecure and unreliable monster transmission lines.

    Refunding the tax is both politically expedient and a wise investment decision because it allows consumers themselves to invest in their energy futures.

  8. Bill Howley says:

    Here is some additional information on Europe’s cap and trade system which has been functioning since 2005. Carbon offsets and credit schemes are an essential part of any cap and trade system.

    Here is what Mark Schapiro said in the final paragraph of his recent Harper’s Magazine article “Conning the Climate” (I didn’t provide a link, because I think the article is behind a subscriber wall.) –

    “Indeed, carbon exists as a commodity only through the decisions of politicians and bureaucrats, who determine both the demand, by setting emissions limits, and the supply, by establishing criteria for offsets. It was the United States that sculpted the cap-and-trade system during the Kyoto negotiations, before pulling out of the accord and leaving the rest of the world to implement the scheme. Since then, most of the world’s major political, financial, and environmental interests have aligned themselves with the idea, because of its potential to generate profits out of adversity and to avoid the difficult economic decisions posed by climate change. Now the Obama Administration and the Democratic Congress—along with most American companies, which see cap-and-trade as the friendliest regulation they could hope for—want to rejoin the world and multiply the market. That market is, in essence, an elaborate shell game, a disappearing act that nicely serves the immediate interests of the world’s governments but fails to meet the challenges of our looming environmental crisis.”

  9. rhmooney3 says:

    Yes, the Harpers article is subscriber-only, but it has been provided here:
    http://citizensclimatelobby.org/files/Conning-the-Climate.pdf

    Maybe those old acid-rain credits can be recycled…or just let Wall Street add it into their economy-building activities.

    How about if everyone drinks more carbonated soda so as to solve the CO2 disposal concern.

  10. [...] toxicity testing showed problems was downstream from the Guy Cove reclamation study site — recently touted in a Kentucky newspaper article — suggesting that efforts to rebuild a stream there haven’t worked as well as [...]

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