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Press Release |
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December 14, 2005
Contacts: Vernon Haltom at Coal River Mountain Watch (304)
854-2182 (WV),
Vivian Stockman at Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (304)
522-0246 (WV),
Cindy Rank at West Virginia Highlands Conservancy (304) 924-5802
(WV),
Liz Veazey at Southern Energy Network (828) 433-9289 (NC),
Gena Lewis at United Mountain Defense (865) 384-7161 (TN)
International alliance calls for end to term
"clean coal," calls for responsible transition
WHITESVILLE, W. VA.-Over 70 organizations from throughout the
United States and 12 countries have endorsed the West Virginia
citizens' group Coal River Mountain Watch's call for an end to
destructive coal mining practices and the term "clean coal."
In a letter circulated internationally, CRMW writes, "Join us in
fighting mountaintop removal, fighting dirty coal power plants, and
supporting renewable energy." The letter summarizes the process and
effects of mountaintop removal, including clear-cutting forests,
blasting, worsened flooding, and toxic waste sludge dams near
schools and communities.
"There is no such thing as clean coal," said Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.,
president of the Waterkeeper Alliance, which endorsed CRMW's letter.
Kennedy's book Crimes against Nature contains a chapter sharply
critical of "King Coal's" abuses and mountaintop removal.
"Coal is dirty when you mine it, dirty when you transport it, dirty
when you burn it, and dirty when you dispose of the ash," said
Vivian Stockman, project coordinator for the Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition in Huntington, W.Va. "And it sure dirties up
politics."
"Massey Energy's most recent sludge spill proves once again the
effects of the clean coal myth," said Vernon Haltom of CRMW. "We the
People will not accept having our lives and homeland sacrificed on
the bloody altar of supposedly cheap energy." Massey's December 10
waste spill affected five miles of streams and caused public water
intakes to be shut down.
According to Alan Nogee, Director of the Union of Concerned
Scientists' Clean Energy Program, "Newer technologies may reduce
emissions, but coal is far from being clean. The enormous impacts
from coal mining-especially the devastating practice of mountaintop
removal-cannot be ignored, even if they are far from view for most
Americans." The Union of Concerned Scientists has criticized the
Environmental Protection Agency's environmental impact statement on
mountaintop mining and valley fills for its focus on streamlining
mining permits, while ignoring scientific evidence of "enormously
destructive environmental impacts" and a "devastating effect on many
neighboring communities."
The governors of West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Montana, and Wyoming
are now promoting factories to convert coal to liquid fuels, saying
this technology is used in South Africa and was used in Nazi
Germany. "Coal fuel liquefaction is one of the dirtiest businesses
around," said Bobby Peek, who endorsed the CRMW letter for Friends
of the Earth South Africa. Peek was the 1998 Goldman Prize winner
for Africa.
Some of the Appalachian regional groups supporting the letter are
United Mountain Defense of Tennessee, Kentucky Heartwood, Christians
for the Mountains, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, and the
Sierra Club chapters of West Virginia, Virginia, and Tennessee.
"We welcome new signatories at any time," said Janice Nease,
Executive Director of CRMW. "The dirty little secret is out, and we
all need to stand together and expose the truth."
The letter with list of signatures can be seen at
www.crmw.net.
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