Tag Archives: coal mining

CoalSwarm: A Clearinghouse for Shared Information on King Coal

by PRW Staff — January 6, 2013 – 11:13am

  • Topics: Energy, Environment

    The article below was written by Ted Nace, who founded CoalSwarm. Since 2008, the Center for Media and Democracy has been hosting the CoalSwarm wiki project on CMD’s SourceWatch.org website. SourceWatch is a sister site of this site, PRWatch.org, and other sites of CMD, which include ALECexposed.org and the FoodRightsNetwork.org.

    NASA climatologist James Hansen is sometimes called “the godfather of climate science” for his pioneering efforts to warn the world about the threat of global warming. Hansen could also be called the godfather of Earth Island Institute-sponsored project CoalSwarm. It was Hansen who, in 2007, called for a moratorium on new coal-fired power plants after U.S. power companies revealed plans to build more than 150 such plants in the country. His proposal became a rallying cry for hundreds of grassroots citizens’ groups across the country. CoalSwarm was created to help that effort, giving environmental activists, local residents, and policymakers the information they need to challenge the muscle of the coal industry and advocate for a renewable energy economy.

    Coal-fired power plant in Utah

    Coal-fired power plant in UtahIn the waning years of the Bush administration, the scattered activists committed to stopping “King Coal” faced long odds. The companies proposing coal plants generally enjoyed the support of local and state officials. Federal officials were greasing the way for more coal mining. Despite the difficult political terrain, environmental and public health advocates went to work, deploying tactics ranging from regulatory interventions to direct-action protests. Power plant opponents joined forces with anti-mining groups in Appalachia, the Southwest, and the Northern Plains, which had already spent decades fighting destructive mining practices such as mountaintop removal.

    For this geographically dispersed movement, social media such as listserves, blogs, online publications, and other communication tools proved invaluable in bringing activists together and allowing a diverse array of groups to coordinate their efforts.

    CoalSwarm added another tool to the mix — an informational website known as a wiki. CoalSwarm’s initial goal was to empower activists with up-to-date information on the status of each known coal plant proposal. CoalSwarm developed its information on the Center for Media and Democracy’s Sourcewatch.org website, a collaborative online reference that provides portals on topics ranging from the tobacco industry to the financial crisis to the PR industry and corporate front groups.

    The anti-coal movement decided to focus on stopping individual coal projects. This proved to be a winning strategy: By October 2012, more than 170 proposed coal plants had been cancelled. For the climate movement, these successes provide a measure of hope at a time when efforts to pass a comprehensive climate change policy at the national level or an overarching climate framework at the global level have failed.

    Over time, the scope of the anti-coal movement steadily broadened beyond the issue of new coal plants. In Appalachia, activists struggled against mountaintop removal with marches, blockades, and tree-sits at mine sites; nationwide, banks financing mining operations faced public pressure to give up their stake in dirty coal. CoalSwarm likewise broadened its contents with hundreds of new wiki pages on mines, mining companies, protests, and on the political underpinnings of Big Coal. A major coal-waste spill in Tennessee added the issue of coal waste to the activist agenda, and again CoalSwarm expanded its coverage.

    By 2011, having succeeded in stopping most new coal plants, activists launched a nationwide campaign to retire the existing fleet of 500 aging coal plants that then provided the U.S. with about half of its power. The effort was boosted by a $50 million grant from the Bloomberg Foundation to the Sierra Club in July 2011. The initial results were encouraging. In Chicago, for instance, local citizens teamed up with the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization and Pilsen Environmental Rights and Reform Organization, and, with assistance from the Sierra Club and Greenpeace, finally won a long struggle to shut down a pair of aging power plants.

    Students at universities and colleges across the country, too, organized campaigns to shut down coal-fired plants. Once many of those campaigns succeeded, campus environmentalists upped their demands with campaigns aimed at convincing college endowment funds to divest from coal-related stocks. CoalSwarm assisted this effort with profiles of campus coal plants and fact sheets on the “Filthy Fifteen” power and mining companies that students selected as divestment targets.

    With the struggle shifting from proposed coal plants to existing coal plants, CoalSwarm’s data on existing coal plants became its most frequently accessed pages. The wiki page “Existing U.S. Coal Plants” had been viewed more than 373,000 times as of October 2012. A rapidly growing table on CoalSwarm’s page “Coal Plant Retirements” showed the success of the plant-retirement campaign: By late 2012, 124 plants were scheduled for retirement. Meanwhile, coal’s share of US power generation was falling rapidly: from 50 percent in 2005 to 38 percent in the 12 months ending in July 2012.

    Overseas, however, the picture is not as pretty. Worldwide coal use grew by 61 percent from 2001 to 2011, with nearly all of the increase happening in Asia, especially China.

    In 2011 and 2012, CoalSwarm began a concerted effort to broaden the scope of the wiki internationally, beginning with Australia, the world’s leading coal exporter. In a joint effort with the Australian group, Environment Victoria, CoalSwarm created the “Coal Watch” project. In 2011, CoalSwarm worked closely with Greenpeace Australia-Pacific to organize the first convergence of anti-coal activists from across Australia. In 2012, CoalSwarm worked with New Zealand’s Coal Action Network Aotearoa, to create a comprehensive reference on that country’s existing and proposed coal projects.

    CoalSwarm turned its attention to India after a 2011 study by Prayas Energy Group reported that hundreds of new coal plants were set to receive environmental permits. In the spring of 2012, CoalSwarm posted an India coal-plant tracker that showed, for the first time, the location and status of 549 proposed coal plants. CoalSwarm also completed the first countrywide survey of grassroots organizing against coal projects in India, describing 32 locations of community opposition, many involving large demonstrations and numerous incidents of anti-coal protesters being killed by police.

    For Southeast Asia, another hot spot for coal mining, CoalSwarm teamed up with the Southeast Asia Renewable Energy People’s Assembly to create a map-based tracker linked to wiki pages on coal plants, mines, and terminals in the region, as well as on proposed clean energy projects.

    Meanwhile, back in the United States, coal exports have become another troubling issue. Declining domestic need for coal-fired power (in large part due to rock-bottom natural gas prices) has led to a new push by coal mining companies to build export facilities, especially in the Pacific Northwest. In 2012, CoalSwarm developed wiki pages on existing and proposed coal terminals, knitting the information together with the first global coal-terminal tracking map.

    The project also began developing information on an issue closely related to coal: fracking for natural gas. While environmentalists debate whether the switch to natural gas is beneficial from a climate perspective, there is no denying that at the local level fracking operations have huge environmental and public health impacts. In addition to providing state-by-state overviews on fracking operations and protests, CoalSwarm provides lists of coal plants being converted to natural gas, information on fracking’s impacts on water and air, and natural-gas-transmission leakage rates.

    By the fall of 2012, the CoalSwarm wiki had attracted more than 19 million page views and had grown to some 6,000 pages of information, including profiles of thousands of plants, mines, terminals, and companies; energy overviews of more than 50 countries, as well as of every U.S., Australian, and Indian state; and numerous articles on the impacts of coal and cleaner energy alternatives.

    To make all this information more easily accessible, CoalSwarm revamped its website, which now has a clickable globe and topical directory. The aim is to improve accessibility and live up to the description of the project by environmental pioneer Lester Brown, who wrote: “CoalSwarm is the central nervous system that this movement needed. It is invaluable.”

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    HERE IS THE LINK TO THE COALSWARM.ORG WEBSITE…

  • Kentucky mine officials face prison for violations

     

    LOUSIVILLE, Ky. –  Plea agreements say two supervisors at an eastern Kentucky mine where a coal miner was killed last year knowingly violated federal safety laws.

    The documents filed this week say Jefferson Davis and Joseph Miniard are planning to plead guilty and are facing prison time when they are sentenced during a March hearing in U.S. District Court.

    The men were supervisors at Manalapan Mining’s P-1 Mine in Harlan County when an underground collapse in June 2011 killed miner David Partin. He was crushed by a large rock.

    The proposed plea deals say Miniard, the mine’s superintendent, is facing up to six years in prison for two safety violations. Davis, the operations manager, is facing a maximum one-year sentence.

    The agreement also says Manalapan could be fined up to $250,000.

    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/11/09/kentucky-mine-officials-face-prison-for-violations/#ixzz2BsKHpesL

    Harlan County coal company and two supervisors will plead guilty to violating federal mine-safety laws

     

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    By Bill Estep — bestep@herald-leader.com

    A Harlan County coal company and two supervisors will plead guilty to charges they willfully violated federal mine-safety laws.

    Attorneys for Manalapan Mining Company and the employees filed court motions, including two on Monday, saying the three will plead guilty.

    The officers are Joseph Miniard, who was the mine superintendent, and Jefferson Davis, who was its operations manager.

    Bryant Massingale, the second-shift foreman, pleaded guilty earlier.

    A federal grand jury charged the company and the three men violated a number of safety rules at Manalapan’s underground P-1 mine in Harlan County in June 2011.

    Charges included that miners were told to use inadequate equipment and made to work in areas of the mine where the roof was not properly supported, and that supervisors didn’t note dangerous conditions in reports.

    The alleged illegal acts happened in the weeks before an employee at the mine, David Partin, 49, of Pineville, was killed when a large section of the mine wall fell on him.

    The U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration has proposed a fine of nearly $600,000 for alleged violations present when Partin died.

    Bill Estep: (606) 678-4655. Twitter: @billestep1

    Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2012/10/22/2380827/harlan-county-coal-company-and.html#storylink=rss?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter#storylink=cpy

    LG&E drops Cane Run ash dump application, plans for giant wall instead

    LG&E Cane Run Generating Station. (By Michael Hayman, The Courier-Journal) March 26, 2010

    LG&E Cane Run Generating Station. (By Michael Hayman, The Courier-Journal) March 26, 2010

     

    Louisville Gas and Electric Co. has withdrawn its application for a new coal-burning-waste dump at its Cane Run generating station in western Louisville, ending a nearly three-year battle with environmentalists and power plant neighbors.

    But another battle may be touched off by a proposal to erect a massive retaining wall, possibly as tall as a 13-story building, so LG&E can put more waste in its current Cane Run dump on the same property .

    Chris Whelan, a company spokeswoman, said the wall would be built only as needed, but could be at most about 130 feet tall, or about 20 feet below the current top of the landfill.

    “It’s made of rock in wire baskets, similar to the retaining walls you see along expressways and will be located on the east side of the landfill in a semi-circle behind the sludge processing plant,” she said. That plant is along Cane Run Road south of the plant.

    She and state Division of Waste Management officials said the retaining wall won’t require any modifications of the company’s landfill permit because it’s not changing the footprint of the 30-year-old dump.

    But Kathy Little, who lives on Cane Run Road near the plant and landfill, said she questions whether it will be safe and what it will look like.

    And attorney Tom FitzGerald, director of the Kentucky Resources Council environmental group, said the change is big enough to require a public review process through a permit modification, and he will requesting that of state regulators.

    Generally, however, environmental, neighborhood and company representatives said on Wednesday they were pleased that the proposed new landfill would be scrapped.

    The 60-acre, $54 million dump at the Cane Run Road power plant would have eventually extended as high as a 14-story building in an area now largely occupied by transmission lines near the Ohio River, towering over an adjacent residential neighborhood.

    Instead, the company will build its new natural gas plant where the landfill would have gone.

    Company officials last year said they were likely to abandon their plans for the landfill when they announced they were planning to close their nearly 60-year-old Cane Run plant and replace it a cleaner-burning natural gas plant, which produces no ash or scrubber wastes.

    CONTINUE READING THRU THIS LINK PLEASE…

    Take Action — Dirty Coal Exports Threaten Paducah and the Ohio River!

    Take Action — Dirty Coal Exports Threaten Paducah and the Ohio River!

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    Less than a year after Paducah residents defeated a similar proposal, Southern Coal is trying again to exploit the Ohio River to export massive amounts of dirty coal out-of-state and overseas. Their new trick — moving the proposed site a short distance down the river in an attempt to avoid zoning hurdles and thwart the will of the people.

    A new report shows the Ohio River leads the nation in toxic discharges and this terminal threatens to make that worse — impacting the health of local communities, our air, and our waterways. We won an amazing victory last year when hundreds of residents spoke out in opposition to coal exports, leading to a rejection of the rezoning proposal tied to the project. Now we need your help again.

    Tell the Army Corps of Engineers — No Dirty Coal Terminal in Paducah!

    1. Complete the form below with your information.
    2. Personalize your message if you wish.
    3. Click the Send Your Message button to send your message to: Robert J. Brown, Army Corps of Engineers

     

    FOLLOW LINK ABOVE TO PETITION ONLINE!

    greedy coal companies aren’t too happy about the EPA proposal

    Have you heard? The EPA just announced a plan to protect our health by limiting dirty soot, smog, toxic mercury, and carbon pollution from coal-fired power plants like the LG&E Cane Run and Mill Creek plants, the Shawnee plant in Paducah, and the Paradise Plant in Muhlenburg County.

    This is great news for us, since coal plants are responsible for most of the air pollution that causes asthma and threatens Kentuckians’ health. They also contribute to mining that increasingly threatens Kentucky communities and the natural beauty of our state. Unfortunately, greedy coal companies aren’t too happy about the EPA proposal. They’re filling the airways with ads attacking the EPA to stop any progress toward cleaning our air and safeguarding our health.1

    We need to make sure that everyone knows the truth: the EPA’s new proposal will protect our health, create jobs, and fight climate change.

    Get the truth out in your community. Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper!

    We all try hard to keep our kids safe and healthy — making sure they buckle their seatbelts, eat fruits and vegetables, and floss before bed. But right now we can’t protect them from the dirty soot, smog, and toxic mercury spewing out from coal plants — and every year thousands of children suffer asthma attacks in Kentucky.

    With the EPA’s new proposal we will have the chance to protect our kids from asthma. We can’t let Big Coal’s attack campaign take this opportunity away from us. This is one of our best opportunities to reduce demand for toxic coal and retire dirty coal plants like LG&E’s Cane Run that pollute our communities and endanger our health.

    Write a letter to the editor to your local paper and make sure the EPA has the support it needs to protect our health!

    It’s easy! We’ve got everything you need to get started: talking points, factsheets, tips on writing a letter, and info on how to submit it. We even have folks who will give you a call to answer any questions you may have.

    Our kids don’t deserve to suffer the effects of Big Coal’s pollution. Take five minutes to write a letter to the editor and make sure they won’t have to any longer.

    Thanks for all you do to protect our environment,

    Thomas Pearce,
    Beyond Coal Campaign
    Sierra Club

    P.S. After you take action, please forward this message!

    References

    1. New ACCCE Ad Campaign Highlights Coal’s Abundance & Affordability, American Coalition for Clean Coal Energy.

     

    Stop Dirty Coal Pollution: Write A Letter To The Editor
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    Cambrian Coal Lawsuit: Kentucky Mining Company Settles Over Deadly 2010 Flood

     

     

     

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A Kentucky mining company settled a lawsuit Friday that blamed mountaintop mining for stoking a 2010 flood that ravaged a tiny Appalachian community.

    The lawsuit filed in August 2010 in Pike County said rainwater runoff from Cambrian Coal Corp.’s surface mine during a July 17, 2010, storm turned nearby Harless Creek into a “raging river.” The flooding engulfed homes and carried away cars and other property.

    Ned Pillersdorf, a Prestonsburg attorney representing the plaintiffs, said the terms of the settlement reached Friday with Cambrian Coal are confidential. A trial had been scheduled for Monday.

    No one answered the phone Friday at Cambrian’s office in Belcher, Ky.

    Residents argued that the surface mining activity on the mountaintop, which stripped away trees, topsoil and vegetation, caused “excessive water flow that resulted in damages upon all of the plaintiffs’ property,” the lawsuit said.

    A hydrological analysis by a Virginia consulting firm said mining in the area increased the peak stormwater runoff by 44 percent during the rains. The study said the company’s mining and failure to restore the area directly caused the increased flow of water down the valley and into Harless Creek.

    Video posted on YouTube by a resident during the storms showed cars and a shed being carried away by the creek, which had swelled into a swift-moving muddy river.

    “It rained some but not that long and it didn’t rain that hard,” said Harold Thacker, a lifelong resident of the area who filmed the flooding. “That water came up like a tidal wave.”

    The 2010 storm caused flooding throughout Pike County, killing two people and knocking out water service to thousands of residents. Federal officials declared a major disaster in the area.

    Pillersdorf said Cambrian’s mining permit had expired the year before and state officials had not enforced reclamation laws that require mining companies to return the land to its original shape, plant trees and restore vegetation. Flyover video recorded by Pillersdorf showed a brown, treeless landscape directly above the Harless Creek area after the flood.

    Pillersdorf said he has three other pending eastern Kentucky cases that are similar to the Pike County suit, in which surface mining is blamed for causing or intensifying flooding.

    “I do not think it’s a coincidence that the worst damage occurs in areas directly below unreclaimed strip mines,” he said.

    The Harless Creek suit also originally named a second mining, company, AEP Kentucky Coal, but residents settled with AEP in October, Pillersdorf said. The residents had sued both companies for damage compensation, punitive fines and the replacement of water supplies.

    ___

    Follow Dylan Lovan on Twitter: www.twitter.com/dylanlovan

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