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Texas' Dirty Coal
The latest carbon dioxide emissions numbers from the Energy Department, listed by state, are out.
Not surprisingly, Texas topped the list of biggest polluters in 2003, the most recent year with available data. It holds steady as 7th in carbon dioxide emissions behind whole nations: the entire United States, China, Russia, Japan, India and Germany.
The co-star of the report was coal, Texas' major power source, because although carbon dioxide emissions from car exhaust account for 25% of America's greenhouse gasses, coal produces 50% of America's electricity and burning coal creates more carbon dioxide than any other common fuel source.
Texas seems to be a house divided regarding its own place in the global emissions hierarchy. In 2005 the state's Governor Rick Perry fast-tracked plans for 11 new TXU Corp. coal power plants after the company lined the war chest for Perry's re-election campaign. But Robert Cervenka, a Republican rancher of Riesel, Texas, managed to organize 1,000 people to fight the governor and TXU Corp. in their effort to double the state's already grossly high emissions. To Cervenka, clean air was not a political or partisan issue: It was just plain good sense. "We might not be out huggin' trees," he said, "but we're real concerned about our land, our water, and our air. It's our land, our lives." Hotshot Houston attorney Steve Susman represented Cervenka's group, pro bono, as they sued Governor Perry. An Austin judge did eventually rule that Perry had no authority to hop into bed with TXU Corp. so quickly, and the company actually ended up dropping most of its construction plans. It wasn't Texas' already high emissions ranking that fueled citizens to act; it was that no one wanted to live next to the plants, breathing the pollution.
Similarly, Texas' own environmental monitoring agency refuses to track the state's carbon dioxide emissions, instead claiming carbon dioxide is "not a regulated pollutant." The Supreme Court ruled in April, however, that the EPA could no longer get away with failing to regulate greenhouse gasses such as carbon dioxide in general, and the emissions of automobiles in particular. Of course, Texas was one of the nine states sitting with the EPA during this case – right alongside other parties like the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers. The same day, the Court ruled 9-0 that coal power plants must meet current, cost-effective pollution control standards when renovated. So even if Texas' own agency refuses to monitor carbon dioxide emissions, the EPA will be held accountable for doing so.
But by whom? Recently, in an effort to "green" the Capitol, Nancy Pelosi vowed to replace the incandescent bulbs in the Capitol's 17,000 lamps with more energy-efficient corkscrew fluorescent bulbs and to begin buying from eco-friendly vendors; but Pelosi, whose effort is supposedly to make the Capitol, which already puts out over 340,000 tons of greenhouse emissions, carbon neutral, stopped her effort just short of calling for an end to burning coal in the Capitol Power Plant. Evidently Pelosi did not want to go any rounds with her Senate colleagues from coal states like Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) and Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who have both previously blocked plans to eliminate coal from the Capitol Power Plant.
President Bush surely won't be forcing the EPA's hand in getting that agency to follow the Supreme Court's ruling by tracking carbon dioxide emissions. One has to wonder, though, when the rest of America -- and even the world -- will also stand up as those Texans did. For even though it's hard for most people to conceptualize the affect melting ice caps will have on each of our lives, few of us want to live next door to a coal-burning power plant.
Need more convincing? Check out this carbon footprint calculator to see what kind of air you're creating for the rest of us.
-- Jessica Savage
Comments
shame on you.
Mother Jones risk her life to protect coal miners jobs. You should be striving to promote sollutions that do the same instead of falling for the misrepresentations of those committed to relegate minering communities to poverty.
shame
Obama supports coal. Randall is right on. Texas oil hates coal. Coal will make us independent of the Muslim oil producers and the middle east. Israel can be saved if we use oil and break our independence from the Arab oil producers. With the proper scrubbers and carbon recapture filters coal can be much cleaner. A special tax should be put on oil to fund more R&D on coal.
Posted by: Tex from Kerrville on 06/10/07 at 11:54 AM Respond
I suspect that the number of miners today is probably a lot lower than it used to be. Coal may now be "extracted" by simply tearing down whole mountains instead of requiring a lot of workers to go in and dig.
Since economists seem to only go by the GDP, the worst economic indicator in history, this makes sense. You see, nothing has value until we cut it down, dig it up, plow it, or otherwise convert it for human use. Mountains have no value. Trees also have no value until we cut them for lumber, which is why the government thinks selling 800 year old trees for a dollar a piece is a good idea.
In reality, the environment provides our life support. What could be more valuable than that?
So, when you imagine destroying the environment by burning the worst possible fuel and increasing global warming dramatically, just imagine whether the few jobs that were saved were really worth the millions of human lives lost. Imagine whether the conservatively forecast billion climate refugees by 2050 will really all survive the displacement. Imagine the global economy as we try to help as many as possible.
Lastly, would you personally rather mine coal or install wind, solar, or tidal energy sources? I would think that the renewable sector's huge increase would not only provide more jobs, but much more desirable ones.
Posted by: Misanthropic Scott on 06/11/07 at 10:18 AM Respond
Coal will make us independent of those who want to destroy Israel. It is every Jew's duty to see that Israel is not destroyed and to fight those anti Semites who facilitate its destruction by supporting the Arab oil producers by giving them money to pay for the suicide bombers that kill our children.
Posted by: Rebecca F. on 06/11/07 at 10:50 AM Respond
Coal will make us dead.
The best way to curb terrorism is indeed to hit it in the wallet. We can, however, switch to wind, solar, tidal, and geothermal power, all homegrown, all carbon-free. It will not matter whether Israel survives if our species goes extinct. Will you get some small comfort from knowing that Israel was the last to go? I won't.
We do NOT need coal.
Posted by: Misanthropic Scott on 06/11/07 at 1:55 PM Respond
Humans have lived with coal for thousands of years and also the burning of wood. We and coal and wood have adapted over time. Oil is relatively new. Wood is the oldest. Wood is a renewable resource. Oil takes too long to reproduce. Sorry Rebecca, but I am not a racist and I have no special feelings for Israel. But you do make a good point about oil. I think that all the posts agree that oil is not attractive. Obama is from Tenn., a coal producing state, so we will give him a break on this issue.
Posted by: Woody on 06/11/07 at 2:03 PM Respond
Minor corrections Woody. Humans have burned coal, especially coal from underground since about 1850. Regardless of where Obama is from or who he is, the planet will not give anyone a break on the issue. Once we cross the tipping point, if we haven't already done so, we will be toast.
Posted by: Misanthropic Scott on 06/11/07 at 3:56 PM Respond
National Coal corp in headquartered in Knoxville Tenn. For practical reasons, Obama has to support coal. Bush is from Texas and supports oil and is against coal. Denmark gets most of their electricity from wind.
Posted by: Latasha on 06/11/07 at 4:02 PM Respond
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Posted by: randall on 06/08/07 at 8:16 PM Respond