The Front Porch Blog, with Updates from AppalachiaThe Front Porch Blog, with Updates from Appalachia

BLOGGER INDEX

More Photos from the U.N.

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

Here are a few more photos from the Coalfield delegation at the U.N:

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Larry Gibson of the Keepers of the Mountains Foundation and OVEC, in front of the legendary United Nations building.

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The coalfield delegation along with sponsors from the Citizens Network, plot a takeover strategy on Sunday at “The Loft” – a facility in Manhattan owned by Appalachian State University.

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Ann League and Kevin Pentz of Kentuckians For The Commonwealth looking “inconspicuous” and trying to figure out what’s so “Sustainable” about more use of fossil fuels at a U.N. Session on”Sustainable Energy.”

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Ann League and Lauren McGrath of Save Our Cumberland Mountains , on their way into the U.N. on Monday.


Sustainable WNC website launched

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

A new web portal, www.sustainablewnc.org was recently launched to connect and inform businesses, nonprofits, citizens and local governments that are working to promote the principles and practices of sustainability in western North Carolina. According to editor, Richard Fireman:

Many people worldwide have come to realize that humanity is at an evolutionary crossroads. Successful transformation of human society from its over consumptive, self destructive path to sustainable earth community requires the creative imagination, courage, and determination from all segments of human culture – individuals, business, government, civic institutions, and grassroots organizations. I have joined www.sustainablewnc.org in order to help catalyze this transition through education, news, collaboration, and dialogue with the people of Western North Carolina.

Richard has been doing excellent work to connect and support sustainably-minded groups and businesses in Western North Carolina for years, and it looks like this latest project will quickly become an indispenable news and information source. Check it out at www.sustainablewnc.org


North Carolina Lawmakers Make Rare Call for Delay in Coal Plant Permitting Process

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

imageA group of North Carolina lawmakers called on the North Carolina Utilities Commission to enact a 90-day suspension of the permitting process for Duke Energy’s proposed 1,600 Megawatt expansion of it’s Cliffside Power Plant near Charlotte. Critics contend that the plant will not only create a significant increase in global warming pollution (the proposed plant will use conventional pulverized coal burning technology), but imposes huge financial risks on ratepayers, who will foot the bill for what may well be a $4 billion investment in new technology.

With 61% of North Carolina’s electricity already supplied by coal, the project will also do nothing to diversify the state’s energy base.

According to the Raleigh News and Observer:

The utilities commission was expected to rule this month on Duke Energy’s application, but the legislators say they want the Charlotte-based utility to open its books and provide more information on the cost estimates for the project.

The lawmakers, including Rep Paul Luebke, a Democrat from Durham, also want state regulators to give greater weight to energy alternatives — such as renewables and efficiency programs — as they consider Duke Energy’s application amid increasing concerns about global warming.

At a press conference in Raleigh, the legislators announced a bi-partisan sign-on letter to the utilities Commission that they expect a dozen or more legislators to sign requesting the 90 day delay and a more transparent process. In particular, legislators cited the increasing costs of coal, and Duke Energy’s refusal to disclose the details of how they are accounting for future coal costs to the ratepayers who will foot the bill, as causes for significant concern.

Speaking at the press conference were Representatives Paul Luebke (D-Durham), Susan Fisher (D- Buncombe), Jennifer Weiss (D-Wake). Senator Stan Bingham (R-Davidson) was one of the lawmakers who called the press conference, but was unable to attend due to an extended committee meeting. Also speaking and fielding questions was Appalachian Voices’ field organizer Austin Hall. Appalachian Voices has been working with the group of legislators to draft and gather signatories on the letter.

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The announcement was also covered in the Charlotte Observer.

The complete text of the letter that lawmakers are sending to the Utilities Commission follows:

February 22, 2007

Renne C. Vance, Chief Clerk
NC Utilities Commission
4323 Mail Service Center
Raleigh NC 27699-4325

Re: Docket No. E-7, Sub 790 (Cliffside)

Dear Ms. Vance,

The lack of transparency in the proposal by Duke Energy to build two conventional, 800 megawatt coal-fired units at its existing Cliffside Steam Station in Rutherford and Cleveland counties is a source of great concern to the undersigned. Based on the arguments presented in two rounds of formal evidentiary hearings before the Utilities Commission, it is our belief that information that was not made publicly available regarding the Cliffside project could pose substantial financial risks to North Carolina’s ratepayers. In order to better evaluate those risks, we recommend a 90-day temporary suspension of issuance of the Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity and the release of information used to project the financial consequences of the project.

The project’s total cost, now estimated at $3 billion, a 50 percent increase in the last year alone, challenges the North Carolina Utilities Commission mandate to ensure the “public convenience and necessity” of the proposal. The opportunity for a fair and open comparison of costs between the project and alternative measures such as demand side efficiency and alternative energy sources should be provided to the citizens and ratepayers of North Carolina before they are forced to foot the bill for billions of dollars of expensive new investments.

The project’s price increase also calls into question the accuracy of certain other cost projections that were used by Duke Energy including coal prices, which have increased significantly in recent years. For instance, the respected energy consulting firm Hill and Associates said in their 2006 Central Appalachian Coal Summary: “Since 2003, mining costs in Central Appalachia have risen roughly 45% from the upper $20s to the lower $40s per ton, establishing a new base platform for coal pricing.” If Duke Energy did not adequately account for these increases, similar to what has already occurred with construction costs, the resulting increases in electric rates will fall to ratepayers, not to Duke Energy shareholders. A 2006 fuel clause adjustment for Duke Energy, for example, found an increase in the utility’s rates, and thus higher bills for ratepayers, without any direct benefits in the form of new jobs, economic growth or improved health and environmental quality.

Duke Energy may also have underestimated the long-term costs of the proposed units with regard to the risk of mandatory carbon regulations. It is likely that if these units are fully operational by 2011, and will operate for 40 or more years, they will be subject to federal regulation of carbon dioxide. Cliffside’s carbon liability and associated future costs would be borne by ratepayers.

Because Duke Energy’s proposal provided insufficient transparency and information to ensure a fair and unbiased decision on the risks, costs and benefits of expanding the facility, the proceedings should be temporarily suspended for a period of 90 days. During this period we request that the public be provided access to the inputs and assumptions of Duke Energy’s cost estimation models.


George W. Bush, Environmentalist?

Tuesday, November 14th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

Steven Hayward, a Resident Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, reported this week on NPR’s Living on Earth that the president has been striking a different tune on energy and environmental issues of late.

Mike Allen [from Time] reported that he was talking to a senior White House official who said that Bush was getting ready to do a 180 on climate change and describe it as in the old cliché as a Nixon in China moment. The actual quote that appeared was that only two oil men could get all the players to the table, including the oil and auto industry, to broker some large and grand compromise on this.

And I’ve heard separately from people who have had casual lunches or dinners with Bush recently that one of the things he’s changed his mind about was environmental issues.

Now let’s put this in the context of the recent elections.  Most of us have taken Bush’s post-thumpin’ willingness to work with Democrats with a near-lethal dose of salt, but there may actually be something to it, if, like many presidents before, he spends his final two years giving greater consideration to his legacy.  While it’s clear Bush considers Iraq as central to his legacy, an increasingly loud chorus of voices around him are saying that 8 years of inaction on global warming could be the legacy he is most remembered for.

Here’s what retired Republican Congressman Sherwood Boehlert said on the same episode of NPR’s Living on Earth:

“I point out to the detractors in my party that even the President of the United States concedes that global warming is for real. I’ve talked to him about this subject one on one. And I’ll tell your listeners just what I’ve told him. I’ll say, “Mr. President, every time I talk with you on a sensitive issue that might be divisive like global climate change, I always feel better after talking with you.” And then I pause for effect. “It’s your staff that screws it up.” And he usually laughs. But I really do feel that he gets it more than some of his staff people get it. And no president wants to leave after two terms in the White House without a sense that history will treat him well. And this is one area where I think the President has an opportunity to address, in a responsible way, something that is important to all Americans and I just have a gut feeling that he’s going to do it.”

So… What if the president really is willing to play ball with the democrats on energy and the environment in his final two years (it may be the ONLY place where they could even hope to find common ground)?  Will the Republicans in Congress play ball (at least 10 of them in the Senate, that is)?  Republicans who are concerned about the results of this year’s elections might actually be willing to, as there’s little question that the environment was one of the big winners of the election.

From the defeat of Richard Pombo and dozens of Republicans with awful environmental records, to the replacement of James Inhofe with Barbara Boxer as the Chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, it’s a new day for those of us working for an energy future in that makes sense.

Let’s review some of the results of the election:

1. Environmental groups, led by Defenders of Wildlife, were instrumental in defeating legendary anti-environmentalist Richard Pombo.  Rarely has the ability of environmentalists to flex electoral muscle been so convincing.

2. Voters in Southern Arizona just elected Gabrielle Giffords, whom the Sierra Club calls an environmental champion, and Jerry McNerny, who defeated Pombo, is the first alternative energy expert in Congress. He’s a wind energy engineer.

3. John Tester, who defeated Conrad Burns of Montana in the senate, is an organic farmer.

4. Washington State passed an initative requiring that a major portion of the state’s electricity come from renewable power: 15 percent by 2020.

5. California Democrat Henry Waxman now chairs the House Government Reform Committee, and his investigations into the last 6 years of energy policy will help to further discredit the power of big energy companies.

6. A whole host of the congressional darlings of the energy industry were just voted out of office.  A few weeks ago, I wrote about how the biggest recipients of coal industry money in both the house and senate were in danger of losing their seats.

Of the top 15 recipients of Coal Industry campaign contributions in the House, 6 lost their seats and several more squeaked by.  Coal darlings that lost there seats were:

Murphy, Tim (R-PA, #1 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Ney, Bob (R-OH, #2 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Hart, Melissa (R-PA, #8 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Pombo, Richard (R-CA, #9 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Hostettler, John (R-IN, #11 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
DeLay, Tom (R-TX, #15 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)

Those that barely held on to their house seats were:

Davis, Geoff (R-KY, #3 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Cubin, Barbara (R-WY, #5 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)

Things didn’t go any better for the coal darlings in the senate:

Santorum, Rick (R-PA, #1 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Allen, George (R-VA, #2 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Talent, James M (R-MO, #3 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
DeWine, Mike (R-OH, #6 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)
Burns, Conrad (R-MT, #14 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006)

And Jon Kyl (R-AZ, #8 in contributions from big coal, 2005-2006) didn’t exactly cruise to victory, though his final victory margin was healthy.

As it turns out, that may be attributable to more than bad fortune on the part of the coal industry.  Mike Bocian, an Associate Vice president at Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research Firm, said in another interview with Living on Earth:

“We did a survey immediately after the election, and if you look at those voters who voted for the Democratic candidate but considered voting for the Republican, the number one concern that they had about the republicans is that they did nothing about the oil companies and the high gas prices. The voters learned about and were extremely frustrated that their Congress and their President had given large tax breaks to the oil companies at a time when gas prices were extremely high and the oil companies were making billion dollar profits.

That was one piece. The second piece was the positive side: the investment in alternative energy. And the voters believe that we are decades behind on investing in alternative energy and ending dependence on foreign oil and they haven’t seen the commitment they’re interested in on that issue.”

So, with many of the biggest allies of coal out of the picture, the will to suffer the inevitable PR nightmare of filibustering alternative energy bills and climate change legislation may not be sufficient.  Then again, the prospect of Mitch McConnell as minority leader makes that considerably more likely.  Regardless, nothing would help Democrats in 2008 more than Republicans falling on their swords to protect Big Coal and Big Oil.

My view is that we should do everything we can to invite and encourage the President to work with us.  While some may find the prospect of helping Bush salvage his legacy distasteful, the prospect of continuing in the wrong direction on energy and climate, at a time when a whole new generation of coal-fired power plants are proposed over the next few years, is far, far worse.  

For the sake of our children and our planet, all hail President Bush the Environmentalist.


National Memorial for the Mountains Earns Nationwide Coverage

Monday, November 6th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

An Associated Press Story on the National Memorial for the Mountains written by Kentucky-based AP Writer Samira Jafari on November 4th, was been picked up by newspapers and television station websites across the country.

Here’s an excerpt from the story:

Now environmentalists have found a way to let the rest of the world see what mountaintop coal mining has done to Appalachia: They have started a Web site that uses the Google Earth database to enable people to see aerial reconnaissance photos of the scarred countryside.

“The point is mountaintop removal has gone on under a cloak of secrecy,” said Mary Anne Hitt, the executive director of Appalachian Voices, one of six environmental groups involved in the Internet campaign. “Unless you have the experience of flying over the region in a small plane, it’s hard to understand the scale of mountaintop removal.”

Their Web site, https://www.ilovemountains.org/, has a link to the campaign’s “National Memorial of the Mountains,” which shows a Google Earth map of Appalachia. The map includes a 3-D tour of sludge ponds, blasting holes and mountains scraped of their peaks.

Below is a list of media outlets currently running the story:


A tough election season for the coal industry

Thursday, October 26th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

Cross-posted from Lazyhorses’ diary on the Daily Kos.

This November is shaping up to be one of the toughest election seasons for the coal industry in recent memory.  No industry other than oil has benefited more from the attack on environmental and safety regulations over the last 6 years by the Bush Administration and the congressional leadership.  From weakening mercury rules and attempts to weaken the Clean Air Act (in the form of the Orwellian “Clear Skies Act”), to weakening the Clean Water Act by allowing mining waste to be dumped indiscriminately in our nation’s waterways, the massive investments by the coal industry to buy the favor of Congress and the White House has never seen a better return on investment.

In the upcoming election, those tables seem to be turning.  Of the 6 incumbent senators that have accepted the most coal industry money, 4 are at serious risk of losing their seats.  According to opensecrets.org, the senators receiving the most coal industry money are:

Rank     State        Senator        Coal$$

1    PA    Santorum, Rick (R)    $93,050   
2    VA    Allen, George (R)    $69,050   
3    MO    Talent, James M (R)    $54,050   
4    WV    Byrd, Robert C (D)    $41,350   
5    KY    McConnell, Mitch (R)    $41,350   
6    OH    DeWine, Mike (R)    $26,300   

Of course, many poll-watchers will recognize a lot of the names on that list as incumbents at the greatest risk of losing their seats.  Below are those same six senators with their Real Clear Politics (RCP) ranking (for seats in greatest danger of changing parties) as well as the RCP average of where they stand in recent polls against their challengers:

State    Senator            RCP rank    RCP ave.

PA    Santorum, Rick (R)    1        -10.2
VA    Allen, George (R)    6            +1.3
MO    Talent, James M (R)    5        +1.3
WV    Byrd, Robert C (D)    na.
KY    McConnell, Mitch (R)    na.
OH    DeWine, Mike (R)    2        -9.2

Almost makes you feel bad for the coal industry, doesn’t it?

Hah!

A similar picture emerges when we look at the House.  The 10 House incumbents receiving the most coal industry money, according to opensecrets.org, are as follows:

Rank     District    Rep                    Coal$$

1    PA-18        Murphy, Tim (R)        $29,821   
2    OH-18       Ney, Bob (R)        $28,350   
3    KY-4          Davis, Geoff (R)    $21,000   
4    VA-9         Boucher, Rick (D)    $20,450   
5    WY-AL       Cubin, Barbara (R)    $20,000   
6    TN-9         Ford, Harold E Jr (D)    $18,000   
7    WV-2         Capito, Shelley (R)    $16,250   
8    PA-4          Hart, Melissa (R)    $16,249   
9    CA-11       Pombo, Richard (R)    $15,500   
10    IN-8             Hostettler, John (R)    $12,500   

Of these 10 seats, 5 are in serious jeopardy of changing hands, according to RCP’s rankings of vulnerable House seats.  Here is where those incumbents (or in some cases where the incumbent stepped down, their successor as candidate for their political party) stand:

Dist.   Representative        RCP rank    Recent polls.

PA-18   Murphy, Tim (R)         na.    (Safe R)
OH-18   Ney, Bob (R)         8         -8.0 (RCP)
KY-4    Davis, Geoff (R)     29        tie
VA-9    Boucher, Rick (D)    na.    (Safe D)
WY-AL   Cubin, Barbara (R)   na.    +7 (Mason-Dixon)
TN-9    Ford, Harold Jr (D)  na.        (Safe D)
WV-2    Capito, Shelley (R)  na.        (Safe R)
PA-4    Hart, Melissa (R)    46        +4 (Keystone Poll)
CA-11   Pombo, Richard (R)   38        +1 (Lake Research)
IN-8    Hostettler, John (R) 4        -15.0 (RCP average)

Whether or not the leadership of the House and/or Senate changes hands, the possibility of enacting meaningful energy legislation to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels will be far better in 2007 and 2008 – and the need to defend our most popular and important environmental laws will be greatly reduced.

The likely shakeup in the House and Senate isn’t just good news for Democrats, it’s good news for all of us that breathe air and drink water.

If you’re not familiar with the devastation being caused by the coal industry, be sure to visit iLoveMountains.org.


Campaign to End Mountaintop Removal is Launched on iLoveMountains.org

Saturday, September 16th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

imageUsing cutting-edge technology, Appalachian Voices and allies across the coalfields have launched iLoveMountains.org, a campaign to awaken America to the fact that mountaintop removal is destroying our mountains, economies and way of life. Please go check it out and, most importantly, help spread the word.


Ed Wiley Video

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

Our friends at Pennies of Promise have posted a video of Ed Wiley up on you-tube. Y’all should check it out by clicking here.

Also, if you’re looking for background on Marsh Fork Elementary School or why Ed’s walking to Washington, check out Appalachian Voices’ Mountaintop Removal Site Tour. It includes an animated virtual flyover of the Marsh Fork Elementary School showind propose mountaintop removal opreations at the site. Click below to watch the 55 second video:

Check back for more updates from jdub on the progress of Ed (as told by Appalachian Voices Field Organizer, Austin Hall) on his 40 day trip for the children.


Old Growth Timber Sale Proposed Just Outside Blowing Rock, NC

Wednesday, July 26th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

This news release was just sent out by our good friends at Wild South. If you live near Boone and Blowing Rock then READ THIS!

Proposed Cutting and Selling of National Forest, Use of Chemical Poisons, and Daylighting Roads Adjacent to Blowing Rock, N.C.

On June 30, 2006, the U.S. Forest Service released an environmental assessment that calls for the cutting and selling of hundreds of acres of the Pisgah National Forest along Thunderhole Creek and Big Ridge which lie adjacent to the town of Blowing Rock. The area is used by many local residents for hiking, camping, jogging and other outdoor activities.

The Forest Service document identifies the proposal as the Globe Project and locates it eleven miles northwest of Lenoir, North Carolina. “This appears to be intentional,” said Lamar Marshall, editor and publisher of Wild South magazine. “The Forest Service knows that the people of Blowing Rock don’t want to see their National Forest cut down, poisoned and sold to timber companies. They want the Forest left alone in its natural condition. Hikers and joggers don’t want to be in an area where hundreds of acres have been poisoned with triclopyr.”

Triclopyr is a chlorinated hydrocarbon that replaced the banned 2,4,5-T, the deadly ingredient used in Agent Orange. It was originally developed for woody plant control along rights-of-way and on industrial sites. It is also used in forest site preparation. Triclopyr is of low to moderate acute toxicity in mammals. Somewhat persistent, residues can persist in the soil for several years. The Forest Service proposes to use Garlon 3A, a formulation that can cause permanent impairment of vision and other negative impacts to humans.

The primary features of the Globe Project include:
231 acres of two-aged shelterwood cuts that will remove These cuts will remove 80% of the basal area or more.
Build 1.1 miles of roads to harvest trees
Re-open 1.2 miles of old logging roads
Herbicide 231 acres with Garlon 3A which is a triclopyr formulation
Clearcut 2 miles of Frankum Road (Forest Service Road 188) in order to “daylight it.” The cut will be 15 feet wide on each side of the road.
Clearcut 2.4 miles of Thunderhole Road (Forest Service Road 4071 to “daylight” it
Gate off Thunderhole Road just before China Creek
Create log landings and skid roads
Designate 311 acres of old growth
Herbicide invasive alien plants to prevent them from spreading into the new cut-over areas

The environmental assessment states that the Forest Service adequately noticed the public but received only eight comments. The purpose of the action is to produce semi clearcut areas which it describes as “early successional habitat” for wildlife, particularly turkey. Opponents of the proposal contend that there is plenty of cleared land on private property surrounding the public property. Forest users also argue that there are plenty of wild turkey already and that cutting hundreds of acres of National Forest is not justified.

Before the Forest Service can make a final decision on a project that involves ground-disturbing activities such as timber sales, road-building, sanitation thinning, herbiciding invasive aliens, or daylighting roadsides, they are required by law to notify the public and allow them to submit written or oral comments expressing their concerns. The agency then must address the public concerns.

Next, the law requires the Forest Service to consider a “range of alternatives” from which they choose a “preferred alternative.” One alternative is called the “no action” alternative where nothing is done. The Forest Service has already rejected this alternative for the Globe area on the grounds that it wasn’t compatible with their North Carolina Forest Plan.

“The people of Blowing Rock deserve to have a public hearing with the Forest Service present to answer questions about this issue before they make a final decision,” Marshall said. “Blowing Rock is noted for its incredible views of the places the Forest Service wants to ruin by cutting the trees down. Tourism and recreation are not compatible with industrial forestry practices. This has to be stopped.”

What you can do:
Exercise your right to participate in the decision-making process that manages your National Forests.

Contact Joy Malone, District Ranger for the Grandfather District, Pisgah National Forest
Tell her the citizens of Blowing Rock were not sufficiently notified of the Globe Project. Tell her that Blowing Rock is ten miles closer to this project than Lenoir. Why was Blowing Rock left out? Insist that the Forest Service make a public presentation in Blowing Rock before the August 10th deadline or that they extend the deadline for the comment period. The citizens of Blowing Rock have a right to submit their comments.

Joy Malone, District Ranger, Grandfather District, Pisgah National Forest
109 E. Lawing Dr, Nebo, NC 28761-9827


Duke Energy’s Plan for Dirty Air

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

Charlotte, NC – based Duke Energy earned the ire of environmental and public health advocates last week when they succeeded in passing a sneaky and confusing bill through the North Carolina General Assembly that would, in essence, allow them to run their scrubbers on their planned new coal-fired generating units at the Cliffside Steam Station in Rutherford County only part of the time. The rest of the time, they will be sending unfiltered sulfur pollution into the air directly upwind of Charlotte and Hickory – two cities that are already having trouble meeting EPA attainment standard for deadly small particle pollution.

The Charlotte Observer summed the issue up well in today’s editorial page:

By going to the legislature for the exemption, the utility avoided having to comply with a rule adopted by the Environmental Management Commission in 2005 that prohibited getting air pollution credits under the Clean Smokestack Act to offset emissions at new plants. Duke won the regulatory fight, but may lose much of the public goodwill it earned by agreeing to the Clean Smokestack Act.

The Observer goes on to say:

The legislature’s Duke Energy exemption was a policy call that could have gone either way. But there’s one danger beyond the facts of that situation. Tar Heel lawmakers should avoid making changes that other states could argue undermines the Clean Smokestack Act — and the North Carolina argument that other states should clean up their own air, too.

This is precisely the point. Since passing the North Carolina Clean Smokestacks Act in 2002, Attorney General Roy Cooper has worked tirelessly to control pollution coming from upwind states. In addition, 80% of the North Carolina General Assembly signed a letter and 25 towns and 4 counties have passed resolutions calling on our representatives in Congress to uphold or even strengthen the federal Clean Air Act, which is one of the few tools we have to force upwind states to reduce pollution. All of this was based on the moral authority the state gained from passing Clean Smokestacks.

In passing the Duke Exemption, the General Assembly has forfeited that moral authority – we’re just another southeastern state that puts the profits of our politically powerful utilities ahead of the health and well-being of our ordinary citizens.

As for Duke Energy, they too have forfeited any gains they made in their image as a “good corporate neighbor” – despite their recently updated website which is a study in duplicitous, faux-environmental public relations. Many of us made the mistake of extolling Duke Energy as a model corporate citizen after they went along with Clean Smokestacks and acknowledged the pressing problem of global warming (words that are very different from their actions).

We won’t make that mistake again.


What YOU Need to Know about Coal Power

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

imageIn July, 2006, the New Hampshire Public Research Interest Group released an incredibly informative report titled Making Sense of the “Coal Rush”. This brief report walks the reader through the intricacies of the emerging debate over the 150 new coal power plants planned for the United States.

At only 40 pages (plus appendices), this report provides a very readable explanation of the reasoning of the power companies in building these plants, consequences of their construction including increased global warming and an introduction to possible alternative energy sources, as well as an informative discussion on the possibilities of carbon sequestration. If you’ve ever had any questions about coal power and its problems, this is an excellent way to get up to speed. The report can be found here.


Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship Announces Plan for “Legislative Change.”

Friday, July 14th, 2006 | Posted by Matt Wasson | No Comments

According to WOWK TV in Charleston Massey CEO Don Blankenship promised to spend

“whatever it takes” to “make the state legislature responsible to the people”

on the taping of this weekend’s “Decision Makers” news program.

According to WOWK:

He makes no secret of the fact that he would like to see more Republicans in office. “I think, once the people see what the legislature is doing, they will want to make some changes on their own”. Blankenship said the natural place to start is in the House of Delegates where all the seats are up for grabs in November.

Blankenship and Massey Energy have been the subject of criticism and protests from community groups in the coalfields, unions and environmentalists nationwide for their poor record on mine safety, their antagonistic stance toward unions, and their use of controversial mountaintop removal coal mining. Most recently they have been criticised for seeking to build a new coal silo near Marsh Fork Elementary School in Sundial, West Virginia.

Blankenship is calling his legislative change campaign, “And For the Sake of the Kids,” a name likely to raise the ire of people in and around Sundial whose children attending the Marsh Fork school are put at substantial risk both from high levels of coal dust from the existing coal silo operated by Massey, which is only yards from the school’s playground and a massive sludge impoundment holding back a few billion gallons of toxic coal sludge behind an earthen dam directly above the school.



 

 


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