Friday 13th Brings Bad Luck in Fight Against Mountaintop Mining
Posted February 13, 2009 in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places, Solving Global Warming, U.S. Law and Policy
On this unluckiest of all days, there is a horror story for those trying to save Appalachia's mountains from senseless destruction in pursuit of the world's dirtiest fossil fuel. A federal appeals court today overturned a lower court ruling curtailing mountaintop removal -- the world's most destructive coal mining technique.
For the past decade -- escalating during the Bush administration thanks to weakened regulations and lax enforcement -- this extreme strip mining has devastated the Appalachian region. Using high explosives and heavy equipment, mining companies have literally decapitated nearly 500 hundred mountains to access thin seams of coal below.
Two years ago, Judge Robert Chambers of the Southern District of West Virginia, issued a ruling effectively stopping the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from permitting mountaintop mining operations. Judge Roberts determined that the Corps erred in allowing coal companies to blast mountains to smithereens and dump the mining debris into the valley streams below -- a clear violation of the Clean Water Act.
Now comes a 2-1 decision by the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Virginia reversing Judge Chambers' ruling. Read press coverage here and the appeals court decision here.
The environmental plaintiff's in this court battle are now evaluating the full implications of today's legal defeat, but it's safe to say that Massey Energy and other practitioners of mountaintop removal are cheering. They are delighted at the prospect of the Corps returning to form as a 'rubber stamp' permitting factory for the coal industry.
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Comments
Peter — Feb 14 2009 09:49 PM
We are destroying our beautiful planet with this type of mining, but not only that, the coal is going to do untold damage for decades, if not centuries, or as I read yesterday, up to 1000 years before the CO2 disappears. Yet we push on blindly. Lets do something about it.
We have a little website for sharing stories at www.globalwarmingwarrior.com. Lets hear your story, small as it may be.
Peter