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Mining CEO Attacks Enviros, Wages War on Coal River Mountain

Mining CEO Attacks Enviros, Wages War on Coal River Mountain

Hollywood couldn't script a better corporate villain than Don Blankenship, CEO of Massey Energy, the nation's fourth largest coal company.  He has built his company up largely by tearing down the mountains of his home-state of West Virginia.  Under his control, Massey has become the undisputed leader in the most destructive strip mining practice on earth -- mountaintop removal -- as well as a repeat violator of federal pollution laws.

The infamous legend of Don Blankenship grew last week when he delivered a blistering speech attacking the press and environmentalists as "communists," "atheists," and "greeniacs", and comparing critics of the coal industry to Osama Bin Laden.  After labeling conservation a slippery slope to socialism, The Don urged his fellow industry execs to be "bold" in challenging the enemies of coal.

As unhinged as his rant may seem, Mr. Blankenship does have reason to worry.  Global warming has Americans waking up to the reality that dirty coal and other fossil fuels represent more of the problem, not the solution to the world's energy crisis.  That said, the dirty energy industry has ruled the day under the Bush administration and now it's seeking huge going-away presents before the Obama administration takes over next year.

In fact, any day now the Bush EPA is expected to announce that it is officially weakening environmental protections to allow mining waste to be dumped in and along streams and rivers.  This rather routine -- yet illegal -- activity is what has enabled mountaintop removal coal mining to ravage Appalachia during President Bush's tenure.

Last week Kentucky's governor joined environmentalists in denouncing EPA's proposed rule change.  And earlier this week the governor of Tennessee voiced his dissent.  In his letter to the agency, Gov. Phil Bredesen notes that more than 1,200 miles of streams in central Appalachia have been directly impacted by coal mining, either by being mined through or by being buried under spoiled disposal sites.  He blasts the 'poor job' done by the federal Office of Surface Mining of protecting streams from the coal mining pollution.  Like his counterpart in Kentucky, Gov. Bredesen argues that safeguarding his state's water quality should take precedence over relaxing environmental rules for the coal industry.

Too bad the governor of West Virginia hasn't taken a stand.  That state, which markets its mountains as the major attraction, is actually ground zero for mountaintop mining.  Yet Governor Joe Manchin, like his predecessors, appears content to let King Coal continue its reign no matter the cost to his constituents.  Yesterday in fact, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) approved Massey Energy's permit to mountaintop mine Coal River Mountain, including hundreds of acres that could generate power from a proposed wind farm.

Apparently, the DEP repeatedly denied citizens' requests for public hearings related to the proposed mining.  Local citizens led by Coal River Mountain Watch are again pleading with Governor Manchin to halt the operation and act on his commitment to renewable energy and to the citizens of West Virginia by rescinding the mining permits. 
 
"Coal River Mountain has enough wind potential to provide electricity for between 100,000 and 150,000 homes, forever, while creating about 50 well-paying, permanent jobs in an area long dependent upon sparse, temporary coal mining jobs," says Rory McIlmoil of Coal River Mountain Watch. "The wind farm would generate over ten times more county revenue than the mountaintop removal operations would. This additional income would stimulate new economic development projects and the creation of new and lasting jobs for the county."

The mining that could begin on the mountain as early as today would immediately impact 24 megawatts of wind potential, and permanent jobs related to the operation of the wind farm.  Research on the Coal River Wind Project confirms that wind is the better economic option for Coal River Mountain, but that depends on the mountain being left intact.  

McIlmoil says that Gov. Manchin has received a petition with 10,000 signatures, over 4,000 emails and nearly 500 phone calls calling for him to stop the destruction and support wind power -- yet his silence is as deafening as the explosions which are set to detonate on the mountaintop.  He also has ignored a recent opinion survey by the Civil Society Institute and Citizens Lead for Energy Action Now (CLEAN), showing that 62% of West Virginians oppose his decision against stopping Massey Energy from using mountaintop removal coal mining to level a section of Coal River Mountain that could have been used for a wind farm.  Citizens had also requested a hearing on the water pollution permits for Massey's Coal River Mountain operation, but the DEP denied this request on the same day that it granted the mountaintop mining permit.

Though Massey's new permit only impacts a small area on Coal River Mountain, once the mining begins it will be more difficult to stop, and so more of the wind resource will be lost.  Coal River Mountain Watch and concerned citizens plan to keep the pressure on the governor to do the right thing for the state and for local residents by preserving Coal River Mountain's wind potential.  

Next month a new economic study will be released, which will show that wind development is a better land use option than mountaintop removal coal mining -- not only for Coal River Mountain, but for all areas in southern West Virginia that exhibit good wind potential. 

Despite Don Blankenship's bluster, a new wind is blowing in this country; it is only a matter of time before blowing up mountains to mine dirty coal comes to an end in this country.  That will be a huge step toward stopping King Coal's reign of terror on our nation's natural resources and communities.

Hey Gov. Manchin, don't you see that West Virginia is "Wild and Winderful"?

Tags:
coalmining, massey, mountaintopmining, mountaintopremoval, windpower

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Comments

Sara CowgillNov 27 2008 12:03 PM

To those who would represent our state and our people, I ask, what can I do to support you in making the best decisions? How can I help you to move away from Coal and to a sustainable, clean, viable alternative to the massive (massey) Destruction that you are for some God-forsaken reason allowing-- What can cause you to destroy our water?
why would you let them destroy our land?
How can you let them sicken our people? And why would you let them take down the trees that clean and filter the air, so they can throw heavy metals and coal dust up for us to breathe?
And the journey of coal? Not only the destruction associated with it's acquisition, but then the "cleaning" process that leaves billions of gallons of toxic filth behind earthen unstructured damns to bury areas and people like Buffalo Creek? We have Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome form coal! We have dead bodies from this! and then to continue the journey of coal, follow it to a place of burning, so that we can contribute to the destruction of the planet-- why stop at destruction on a local level when you can go global? The twin edges of deforestation and burning of coal make this train of destruction a train of death.
Lets change tracks!
Let us get on the Train of Change! Let wind power rule the day! and blow Blankenship out of the sea of possibilities! We will huff and puff and blow the man down!
WE KNOW that wind will bring jobs! We can learn this! We can do this!! We could be a world leader in anything we attempt-- we don't have to be a chemical dump, or a toxic sludge sump. We can put up turbines and there is a new Helix turbine that is really pretty and doesn't harm birds or bats, and it hardly needs any wind at all to be very very effective!!
It's not hard to choose!
This is not difficult to do!
( I once heard this phrase used when suggesting that you can pull the balls off a rapist who is try to assault you. is that not appropriate now?)

I don't know if you think you owe those King coal frustrated ugly-minded liars anything, but I think you owe the people and the generations of West Virginians to come-- you owe us the representation of the honesty and integrity that we show you. We are a good people and we deserve LIFE! We want LIFE!

We want to swim in the rivers again, to walk and hike in the hills, to see the Great Horned Owls and Golden Eagles of our youth, to see the bears and the game, the huge turkeys and coons and possum and WE DESERVE our heritage of fish and game and the Mountains that we call the West Virginia Hills, oh, yes, with their summits bathed in glory like Prince Emanuel's land, that's our heaven, that's our home.

Trackbacks

Dethroning King Coal on December 1, 2008 10:30 AM
Last month I was fortunate enough to drive through – and not stop in – the lovely state of West Virginia.  It was dark, but between the mountain passes I did get to do some sightseeing.  I was impressed by the neoclassical grandeur of the state ...

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