These came from another list serve I am on, and I found them
interesting.
Rainforest Action Network's current campaign.:
*Update: America's Dirtiest Bank: *We want to hear from you. Which
bank do you think is America's dirtiest-- and the most worthy RAN
target?
*
Bank of America
<http://ga3.org/campaign/target_bofa/8enwgdk2h85jjkb?>?
*Bank of America is elbow deep in coal!*
* Responsible for a $175 million loan to the "poster child" of
mountaintop removal coal mining: Massey Energy.
* Major funder of Peabody Energy, the largest mining company in the
world. Peabody was recently implicated in the contamination of
Navajo and Hopi water sources in the Black Mesa area that extends
through northern Utah and Arizona. Furthermore, Bank of America
financing is allowing Peabody to build three new coal-fired power
plants in Illinois, Kentucky and New Mexico.
*
Citi <http://ga3.org/campaign/target_citi/8enwgdk2h85jjkb?>?
*Citi is elbow deep in coal!*
* Financial backer of the largest greenhouse gas emitter in the
nation--American Electric Power (AEP). AEP is heavily involved in
the US Coal Rush building 5 new coal plants around the Mid-West
and South. AEP will also manage up to 9 coal-fired power plants
within 10 miles of Meigs County, Ohio--a community already ravaged
with health and environmental impacts of coal.
* Funder of destructive strip mining and mountaintop removal from
the American Southwest to Appalachia.
* Co-owner of Texas-based utility TXU who just got permits to build
3 outdated dirty pulverized coal-fired power plants in north and
central Texas.
*
JPMorgan Chase
<http://ga3.org/campaign/target_jpmc/8enwgdk2h85jjkb?>?
*JPMorgan Chase is elbow deep in coal!*
* Funds Dynegy, which is sponsoring the building of 12 new
coal-fired power plants -- the largest coal build-out in the
country.
* Helped Mid-American Energy secure $350 million in financing for
construction of a new coal-fired plant in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
Mid-American Energy operates dozens of power plants across the
U.S. and England.
________________________________
Ultimately, global warming presents a much greater threat to our planet
than the war in Iraq. However, the war will be the first and foremost
issue in the minds of the American people as long as our troops are
there. The longer that we stay in Iraq, the longer it will take our
country to focus on the threats to our global environment.
Tom Yager
To: Duane. RE: Public Hearings on TrAIL power line in Western
Pennsylvania..............
Here is the schedule:
1. Washington County fairgrounds – Building B – August 29 & 30,
September 19 & 20 – 1:00 and 7:00 pm daily
2. Greensboro VFD – September 5 – 1:00 pm
3. Carmichaels High School – September 5 – 7:00 pm
4. Waynesburg University Alumni Hall – September 6 – 1:00 and 7:00 pm
To get on the schedule, you simply sign up when you arrive at the hearings.
Rick Layton, Greene County.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
P.S. I am planning to testify, either at Greensboro or Carmichaels, on
behalf
of the MonValley Clean Air Coalition. I will try to get representatives
from
the WV Sierra Club and from a few other groups to come out as well.
Duane Nichols
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NORTHERN VIRGINIA.
Hearing on Power Line Draws Vocal Crowd
Supporters Say Project Is Vital to Success Of Area Economy;
Foes Question Its Need
By _Sandhya Somashekhar_
(http://projects.washingtonpost.com/staff/email/sandhya+somashekhar/)
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 27, 2007; Page B02
Heated testimony at a hearing yesterday about a proposed 65-mile high-voltage
power line through _Northern Virginia_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Northern+Virginia?tid=infor…) provided a hint of the
friction associated with the project and the tension ahead as the state begins
deciding whether to approve it.
Many people waited all afternoon at _Fauquier High School_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Fauquier+High+School?tid=in…) in
_Warrenton_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Warrenton?tid=informline) for the chance to address a State Corporation Commission hearing
examiner, who will play a key role in deciding whether the 500 kilovolt line proposed
by Dominion Virginia Power and Allegheny Power should be built.
Although organized opposition to the project has been fierce and many
speakers condemned it, a parade of business owners and representatives from
Northern Virginia chambers of commerce endorsed it, saying the area's economy will
depend on a reliable flow of electricity.
"The success of the high-tech-driven economy in _Fairfax County_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Fairfax+County?tid=informli…) and the
rest of Northern Virginia" depends on maintaining the infrastructure, said
William D. Lecos, president and chief executive of the Fairfax County Chamber of
Commerce, reading from a statement. "Without it, the economy of Northern
Virginia cannot thrive."
But William Arrington, whose southern _Fauquier County_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Fauquier+County?tid=informl…) farm could be
sliced by the line, said that if _Fairfax_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Fairfax?tid=informline) needs power, that's Fairfax's problem
"because that's where the over-development has been allowed to run rampant."
The hearing was the first of eight scheduled this summer about the
transmission line, which is planned for parts of _Frederick_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Frederick+(Maryland)?tid=in…) , Fauquier,
Rappahannock, Culpeper and _Prince William counties_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Prince+William+County?tid=i…) before ending at a
substation in _Loudoun County_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Loudoun+County?tid=informli…) . Without it, the region might face rolling
blackouts within five years, Dominion officials have said.
Since announcing the project last summer, Dominion has encountered
well-organized, sometimes emotional opposition from landowners, conservationists and
others who say the line would scar the landscape and encourage the
construction of polluting coal plants. The company revised the line's route to avoid
environmentally and historically significant areas, and the opposition has
persisted.
Led by the slow-growth _Piedmont Environmental Council_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Piedmont+Environmental+Coun…) ,
critics have promised to convince the state that the project is not needed for
Northern Virginia. The Warrenton-based organization has raised about $1
million to fight the project, organizing rallies and commissioning studies that
emphasize alternatives such as conservation.
This month, Dominion has stepped up its efforts to convince residents that
the line is essential for the health of Northern Virginia's electrical grid and
that no alternative will suffice.
Dominion commissioned and is heavily promoting an April study by KEMA, a
_Massachusetts_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Massachusetts?tid=informline) engineering firm, that shows "there will be significant
problems in the system that will require new transmission facilities by 2011."
A full-page newspaper ad by Dominion this week said, "Without a new
transmission line, Northern Virginians will need to reduce electrical use by 40%."
And the company has been reaching out to business owners who support the line,
asking them to speak out at hearings that are expected to be dominated by the
line's critics.
Six more meetings will take place next month -- in Bristow, _Winchester_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Winchester?tid=informline) and
_Front Royal_
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/related/topic/Front+Royal?tid=informline) . The commission will spend the fall studying the issue and will
reconvene in January to hear arguments from attorneys for the different
sides. If the commission approves the project, Dominion officials hope to have it
built by 2011.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Scores press SCC to reject Dominion plan
By: Don Del Rosso, 07/31/2007, Fauquier Times-Democrat
There seemed to be no end in sight.
For two days and more than 10 hours, they attacked Dominion Virginia Power's
proposed transmission line through the Piedmont.
In speeches long and short, impassioned and measured, opponents from
Fauquier, Rappahannock, Culpeper, Loudoun and elsewhere hammered away at familiar
themes.
The utility has failed to demonstrate a need for the planned 500,000-volt
line, they told the State Corporation Commission during a public hearing last
Thursday and Friday in the Fauquier High School auditorium.
The proposed line would destroy vistas and pristine land under easement,
diminish property values, degrade air quality and compromise agricultural
operations, tourism and historic sites, critics told SCC Hearing Examiner Alexander
F. Skirpan Jr..
Ninety-four of the 106 speakers asked Skirpan to recommend denial of the
proposed line. Fifty-eight of the public hearing speakers live in Fauquier.
(Skirpan will make a recommendation to the SCC's three-judge panel, which will
decide the matter.)
Just 12 people, representing Northern Virginia businesses or organizations
such as the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce, the Prince William Regional
Chamber of Commerce and the Vienna-Tysons Regional Chamber of Commerce,
testified in favor of the proposed line.
Dominion insists the line must be in place by 2011, or Northern Virginia
faces the prospect of rolling blackouts. Its 1,000-page application to the SCC
includes a 70-page analysis by Massachusetts-based KEMA Inc. that argues a
transmission line would provide the only practical solution to meet Northern
Virginia's immediate and long-term electricity demands.
The proposed line would link substations in Frederick and Loudoun counties.
It would parallel an existing transmission line but require Dominion and its
partner, Allegheny Power, to acquire substantial additional rights of way
from private landowners.
Besides Frederick and Loudoun, the proposed 65-mile line would cut through
parts of Fauquier, Rappahannock, Culpeper and Prince William counties. The
alternative route would connect the same substations along Interstate 66, using
Virginia Department of Transportation right-of-way.
Under either scenario, the line would be suspended from steel towers that,
in places, could exceed 150 feet.
Dominion's "credibility" should be tested, said Kathleen King, a retired
federal government lawyer from Broad Run. She claims the utility has given no
specifics about the precise location of the proposed power line.
"There are absolutely no straight answers," she told the hearing examiner.
"I have no idea how close I am to those (proposed) power towers (along I-66),
but I'm close....We can't get information from the applicant to tell us where
the power line is going."
Like many others, King believes that conservation methods and more efficient
technology would eliminate the need for a new line.
Her remarks elicited cheers and clapping, which Skirpan quickly squelched
with a stern reminder.
Before the hearing started Thursday afternoon, he explained to the audience
that the hearing would be operated similar to a courtroom proceeding.
Speakers, which he called witnesses, would be sworn in and could be subject to
questioning by SCC staff and lawyers and attorneys representing various interests.
"It's not a situation where we have audience participation," Skirpan said.
"I don't want applause, boos or any types of comments from the audience."
If necessary, he would evacuate the auditorium and listen to speakers
individually.
William Arrington of Catlett called the proposal "ill-conceived." Arrington
contended that Dominion has yet to demonstrate a need for the line, which he
claims would violate the sanctity of conservation easements.
He also said the line would produce electromagnetic fields, posing
"unacceptable health risks to the general public."
If Northern Virginia indeed needs substantially more electricity, then build
a power plant there, Arrington suggested.
William Stribling of Markham said the I-66 alternative would devastate an
area rich with historic and agricultural importance, undermining Fauquier's
agribusiness and tourism economies.
Harry Atherton, who represents Marshall District on the Fauquier County
Board of Supervisors, spoke as a private citizen. He pointed out that Fauquier
has one of the highest concentrations of conservation easements in the nation,
with more than 77,000 acres permanently protected from further development.
Moreover, he said it claims 29 sites on the Virginia Landmarks list and
National Register of Historic Places, two scenic rivers, 10 Civil War
battlefields, 17,000 acres in historic districts, 8,000 acres in state management
reserves, 1,800 acres of state park land and 1,000 acres of county park land.
"This is not by accident, but the result of many decades of public and
private efforts to preserve this historic and beautiful part of [Virginia]" he
concluded. "If the end result of these efforts is that the county has become the
corridor of least resistance for the transmission line of power to the
Mid-Atlantic, this seems both unfair and unnecessary."
Fauquier's population stands at "just over 60,000" and thus isn't "a
significant contributor to congestion on the Northern Virginia [power] grid,"
Atherton also noted
To the contrary, Fauquier has been part of the solution to the area's energy
needs, because it approved two natural gas-fueled generators near Remington
that operate during the hottest and coldest days, he claimed.
Katherine Kristie of Rappahannock County focused on air quality and
health-related issues.
The proposed line would transmit electricity generated by some of the
nation's "dirtiest" coal-burning plants, Kristie said.
"Why?" she asked. Because "it is much cheaper for the power industry to
continue to rely on some of the dirtiest plants than to utilize
cleaner-generation energy plants located closer to northeast customer demand."
Kristie continued: "But when public health costs and environmental impacts
are considered, is this truly the cheapest solution?"
She and other critics also believe Dominion wants the line chiefly because
it would reap huge profits from electricity destined for the Northeast.
The KEMA report does not address the line's financial implications for
Dominion.
KEMA's Jeff Palermo, who helped prepare the transmission line study, said
Northern Virginia, a "big-time" importer of electricity, would be the primary
beneficiary of the line, not the eastern seaboard.
Northern Virginia's business community was represented in force at the
hearing.
Virginia Chamber of Commerce President Hugh Keogh said the continued robust
expansion of the region's economy depends the "predictability and
availability" of electricity.
Northern Virginia generates high-paying technology jobs that provide spinoff
financial benefits for the entire state, Keogh said. A perceived lack of
energy in the next decade could threaten future economic development
opportunities, he added
Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce William D. Lecos called Northern Virginia
the state's "economic engine."
As its high-tech sector grows, so must critical infrastructure such reliable
electricity sources to sustain business, Lecos said.
"There's every reason to believe this trend [of economic growth] will
continue," he said.
Representatives of the National Association of Industrial Office Properties
and several businesses spoke in support of the power line.
SCC hearings will continue during the next two weeks in Prince William
County, Winchester and Front Royal.
Dominion Spokeswoman Le-Ha Anderson said the hearing offered no surprises.
"We feel that, frankly, it was an example of why the SCC process is fair,"
giving people a chance "to talk as long as they wanted to" about issues that
concern them, Anderson said.
"It was nice to hear from independent organizations, businesses and
associations" that support the line, she added.
Despite widespread objections to the proposal, Anderson said "We still
believe the need is great. We're steadfast in the belief the need is real."
The hearing turnout and "quality of testimony" impressed Chris Miller,
president of Piedmont Environment Council, which plans to spend more than $2
million to fight the project.
"Are the hearings meaningful?" Miller said. "Yes. You're getting hundreds of
people testifying about the [line's] impacts on their lives. The quality of
testimony is very high. There's a lot of information that otherwise would not
be on the record."
Some people waited up to four hours to testify, he said.
"The intestinal fortitude was high," Miller said.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Power struggle
Area residents denounce line proposal
By Drew Houff, The Winchester Star
WINCHESTER — The first day of local hearings regarding a proposed 5
50-kilovolt transmission line that may pass through Frederick County seemed at least
slightly different from previous hearings in Warrenton and Bristow.
For one, none of the 32 speakers at James Wood High School on Monday
supported the proposed joint project from Dominion Virginia Power and Allegheny
Energy’s Trans-Allegheny Interstate Line Co. subsidiary.
The hearings in Warrenton at least had a few contractors and developers who
appeared to back the project, which power company officials say is needed to
provide for increased electricity needs in Northern Virginia.
The general theme from the first day of public testimony at James Wood
suggested that neither Allegheny nor Dominion had provided information to support
the claim that the new lines are needed.
No one from either company testified. That testimony will come in
evidentiary hearings beginning on Jan. 14 in Richmond.
Alexander F. Skirpan Jr., the hearing examiner for the State Corporation
Commission, will listen to all of the testimony at each hearing and then file a
recommendation with the commission, which will decide the fate of the
proposal, said Andy Farmer, the SCC’s education resources manager.
Skirpan reminded people attending Monday’s morning and evening hearings that
this was a court of record for the testimony and that audience
participation, including clapping in favor of some remarks, would not be viewed favorably.
He confirmed that position during the morning hearing when the audience
applauded testimony from Wingate Mackay-Smith of White Post.
She said she was speaking with mixed emotion, but reminded those in
attendance that approval of the proposal was similar to giving the 800-pound gorilla
a banana.
"There’s no evidence that Virginia has any need for new lines to avoid
blackouts in 2011, as the companies claim," Smith said, drawing some enthusiastic
cheers.
Skirpan quickly responded, reminding everyone that he could close the
hearings if they continued to interrupt testimony. He encountered no such problems
in the evening session.
Clarke County Board of Supervisors Chairman John Staelin, the lone local
officeholder to speak on Monday, said his board had opposed the possibility of a
high-voltage line through his county a year ago, leading to a unanimous
resolution in opposition.
"I came here today because I want to make sure you know this is not a ‘Not
in my backyard’ issue," he said. "This power line may have moved out of Clarke
County’s backyard, but that does not suddenly make it a better idea for
either Clarke or the rest of the citizens of the commonwealth."
Elizabeth Tate of Star Tannery offered a theme that was echoed by many,
noting that Allegheny’s treatment of the landscape had decreased the values of
property.
She said her family had tried to leave behind the visual clutter in Virginia
Beach for the unscarred environment of the northern Shenandoah Valley, but
added that the proposal would put a gash in the trees and bring other
unsightly problems.
Eleanore Boudreaux of Stephens City agreed, noting that she had lost
livestock and value to her property because of moves by Allegheny.
Ellen Rivers of Frederick County said Virginia has to set a good example,
evaluating the effects of the lines before approving them.
Barbara Smith of Stephens City said another potential concern for the lines
would be their impact on tourism, particularly the effect on sightlines near
the Cedar Creek Battlefield and Belle Grove Plantation near Middletown.
Stanley M. Hirschberg, president of The Cedar Creek Battlefield Foundation,
agreed, noting that tourist dollars may disappear along with the views if
120-foot-tall power lines are installed.
The hearings at James Wood will continue today at 9:30 a.m.
Additional public hearings are scheduled at the North Warren Volunteer Fire
Department near Front Royal on Wednesday and Thursday. Wednesday’s hearings
will begin at 1:30 p.m. and reconvene at 7 p.m, and Thursday’s hearing will
begin at 9:30 a.m.
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We will have a "take action" webpage on this next week. We should generate
as many comments as possible so we can say that the Admin. is ignoring the
public (once again!) wishes on this issue.
Pls forward the News Release as you wish, best, paul
---------- Forwarded message ----------
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 22, 2007
Contact:
Cindy Rank, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy (304) 924-5802
Dianne Bady, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (740) 886-5796
Vernon Haltom, Coal River Mountain Watch (304) 854-2182
Jared Saylor, Earthjustice (202) 667-4500
Jim Hecker, Public Justice (202) 797-8600
Ed Hopkins, Sierra Club (202) 675-7908
Bush Administration Proposes Repeal of Stream Protection Rule to Ease Legal
Limits on Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining
Protective "buffer zone" for streams ignored under new OSM plan
Washington, D.C. – Continuing a dangerous and irresponsible trend, the
federal Office of Surface Mining (OSM) this week will announce plans to try
again to make stream annihilation legal by exempting coal mining wastes
from a 1983 regulation.
For years, the agency has ignored the law and allowed thousands of miles of
headwater and perennial streams in Appalachia to be permanently buried by
coal companies under millions of tons of waste generated by mountaintop
removal coal mining. Known as the "stream buffer zone rule," this
decades-old regulation has prohibited surface coal-mining activities from
disturbing areas within 100 feet of streams. A copy of the proposed changes
to the buffer zone rule is available at:
http://www.earthjustice.org/library/legal_docs/draft-environmental-impact-s…
"The Bush administration just doesn't give up in its quest to give away
more and more legal protections to the mountaintop removal polluters," said
Joan Mulhern, Senior Legislative Counsel for Earthjustice. "Despite the
federal government's own studies showing widespread, harmful, and
irreversible stream loss in the region, the OSM proposes exempting the most
harmful mountaintop removal mining activities from the buffer zone rule.
Once again, OSM is demonstrating that it is not an effective regulator for
the public, but the 'Office for Slicing Mountains' and 'Office of Stream
Mangling' for coal companies."
The new exemption is the latest chapter in a long-running effort by the
Bush administration to allow coal companies to avoid compliance with both
the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (administered by OSM) and
the Clean Water Act. According to OSM's own figures, 1,208 miles of
streams in Appalachia were destroyed from 1992 to 2002, and regulators
approved 1,603 more valley fills between 2001 and 2005 that will destroy
535 more miles of streams. Those actions were taken in defiance of the
plain language of the existing rule. Under the plan announced this week,
OSM proposes to change the rule to conform with its deviant behavior. It
would exempt from the stream buffer zone rule those very mountaintop
removal activities that are most destructive to streams, including
"permanent excess spoil fills, and coal waste disposal facilities" – in
other words, giant valley fills and sludge-filled lagoons.
"OSM has chosen to turn its back onirreplaceable water resources of the
Appalachian region," said Cindy Rank with West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy."Headwater streams are the lifeblood of the mountains and
those of us privileged enough to livein those mountains.This new
interpretation of the buffer zone rule is an unholy reversal of the
original intent of the Surface Mine Act,which wasto protect communities
and streams, not bury them."
The effort to repeal the buffer zone rule dates back to 2004, when OSM
proposed repealing the Reagan-era rule to allow coal companies to
accelerate mountaintop removal mining in Appalachia. In response to
protests from coalfield residents and conservation groups, OSM agreed it
would do an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) before changing the
longstanding rule. But in its new draft EIS, OSM rejected and failed to
analyze all alternatives that would have restricted stream filling. In its
own words, "OSM would not anticipate a major shift in on-the-ground
consequences from any of the alternatives." Most egregious is that the
agency did not even consider the effect of enforcing the stream buffer zone
rule as written.
"OSM summarily rejected all alternatives that would reduce harm and only
considered those that would allow stream burials to continue at the same
rate as in the past," said Jim Hecker, Environmental Enforcement Director
at Public Justice. "OSM's own report shows that valley fills harm
downstream water quality but this proposal does nothing to address it."
The agency also assumes all stream loss will be fully mitigated, even
though it freely admits that stream mitigation has generally failed. "While
proven methods exist for larger stream channel restoration and creation,
the state of the art in creating smaller headwater streams onsite has not
reached the level of reproducible success," the OSM wrote. "Attempts to
reestablish the functions of headwater streams…have achieved little success
to date."
"The coal companies have yet to show that they can successfully recreate
streams after they completely destroy these mountains and bury these
waters, yet OSM still gives them this major exemption from the law," said
Dianne Bady, with the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition. "These headwater
streams are the sources of our drinking water and our heritage, and this
administration is knowingly allowing them to be buried and poisoned."
This wholesale exemption for mountaintop removal mining will have
significant impact to downstream water quality, permanently filling and
destroying important headwaters that feed larger waters that function as
drinking water sources and fishing and recreational waters for thousands of
Americans. Already, mountaintop removal mining has flattened more than
500,000 acres and permanently buried 2,000 miles of streams.
"The OSM essentially wants to destroy our most valuable, life-giving
resource to extract a filthy, polluting resource," said Vernon Haltom of
Coal River Mountain Watch. "We who live near mountaintop removal sites are
having our future sustainability destroyed for someone else's short-term
profits."
"This proposal amounts to a stamp of approval for the nation's most
destructive form of coal mining," said Ed Hopkins, Director of Sierra
Club's Environmental Quality program. "Instead of loosening protections for
our waters, we should be strengthening our commitment to cleaner, renewable
sources of energy that can protect our communities, boost the economy and
help fight global warming."
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
Wildlife & Endangered Species Comm.
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-6975
Jeff
Regardless of how we are thinking, this editorial is increasingly the way most of the rest of the country is thinking. To remain competitive, and get off the bottom of Forbes' list, we need an aggressive approach to diversify the State's economy, including the energy industry. As I have said so often, and will not let up stating, "We MUST participate, and/or even be seeking leadership roles, in the rapidly growing alternative and renewable energy technologies, including their manufacturing and jobs potential!".
I am concerned that yesterday's meeting, while interesting, was not particularly helpful in considering the changes in thinking, as well as the unique future policies and actions needed for the participating in the energy dynamics, not of the past, but of the today and the future. We certainly must avoid a token, pacifying or just tolerant approach. I did not come away from the meeting with any sense of accomplishment.
You will recall that Charles Bayless urged you and I to look at the Ontario Power web pages for their innovative and aggressive efforts at energy conservation and efficiency. I did, and it is quite revealing.
Global Warming is real. Mandating efforts for efficiency and conservation is appropriate from the power plants on down to the consumer, residential, commercial and industrial.
When is the appointment with WV Tech's Charles Bayless and faculty rescheduled, and why was it cancelled? The potential for clean safe jobs in the construction and operation of CSP plants must be investigated...the PEA made that decision several meetings ago, and the investigation is dragging on much too slowly. Progress should be reported at the next PEA Meeting, billed as the "Renewable Energy Public Hearing".
We were asked again at the meeting yesterday why we are not investigating this, and no answer was provided. I don't enjoy being embarrassed.
The agenda yesterday called for members to speak. We skipped that, and went to the public. It seems to me that we would be better served if we have Q&A after each speaker, and, as I tried to do yesterday, that we have a dialogue with those who speak so that they feel we are listening and value their input.
Jeff, I trust that you understand I am submitting these thoughts in an effort to help us all improve these important hearings.
Allan
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2007…<http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2007…>
Coal miner's nation
August 23, 2007
LATE IN HIS presidency, George Bush finally brought himself to lament the nation's addiction to oil. But neither he nor leading Democratic politicians have ever rallied the country to break its addiction to a more lethal form of energy: coal, which supplies half the nation's electricity.
This month, an accident in Utah entombed six miners, forever. Three more died trying to rescue them. Four days after the first accident, three coal miners plunged down a shaft to their deaths in an Indiana mine. In China, which has the world's worst coal-mining fatality record, 181 miners are trapped in a flooded mine shaft with little hope of survival. More than 2,000 Chinese coal miners have died in accidents this year.
Then there are the respiratory conditions, including asthma, that are made worse by the sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and fine particulates emitted in coal's combustion. Coal-burning power plants are also the principal man-made source of the nerve-system poison mercury. Its buildup in many species of fish has caused the Food and Drug Administration to advise women of child-bearing age to limit consumption of that otherwise healthful source of protein. Despite such warnings, women in the United States face a 10 to 15 percent risk of bearing children with mercury levels high enough to slow their mental development.
In Appalachia, mining by mountaintop removal is changing the face of the earth. Coal burning is changing the climate of the earth.
Of all the fossil fuels, coal emits the most carbon dioxide, the most common greenhouse gas. Forty percent of the US total of carbon dioxide comes from coal burning, mostly to produce electricity. Gasifying coal before burning it makes it possible to capture and store carbon dioxide emissions, but the process raises the cost of the electricity produced and has yet to be tested at full scale. In the meantime, utilities in the United States and elsewhere continue to build coal-fired plants without controls on carbon dioxide. Last year alone, China built more than 90 major coal-fired power plants.
Legislation passed by the US House that would force utilities to start getting more of their power from renewable sources faces an uncertain future in the Senate, where it is opposed by senators from states without ready access to renewables.
The United States cannot wean itself from coal overnight. But as Congress and all Americans chart the nation's energy future, coal's environmental costs, especially its contribution to global warming, have to be factored into the equation. So do those accidents in Utah, Indiana, and China. No other energy solution -- not wind, solar, nuclear, biomass, natural gas, geothermal, and certainly not conservation and efficiency -- takes a toll in lives and environmental destruction that is at all comparable to coal's.
ATTACHED IS A LINK TO A NEW YORK TIMES
ARTICLE<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/23/us/23coal.html?ex=1188619200&en=f3f537189…>YESTERDAY
DISCUSSING THE PROPOSED MTR RULE FROM OSM, IT IS, IN PLAIN
ENGLISH, A BLANK CHECK TO GO FORWARD WITH THE PRACTICE OF MOUNTAIN TOP
REMOVAL WITHOUT SIGNIFICANT REGULATORY BARRIER OF ANY TYPE.
THE TEXT OF THE PROPOSED RULE IS ATTACHED AS A .TXT FILE AND WAS PUBLISHED
IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER TODAY. THERE IS A 60-DAY COMMENT PERIOD ENDING OCTOBER
23, 2007. I BELIEVE THE SIERRA CLUB, NATIONALLY, SHOULD BE ON RECORD
AGAINST THE PROPOSAL IN ORDER TO PRESERVE THE RIGHT TO CHALLENGE IN IT COURT
LATER.
BILL
--
William V. DePaulo, Esq.
179 Summers Street, Suite 232
Charleston, WV 25301-2163
Tel: 304-342-5588
Fax: 304-342-5505
william.depaulo(a)gmail.com
www.passeggiata.com
THE PHILLIP MERRILL CENTER HAS ADDED MORE GREEN FEATURES
The Philip Merrill Center is the headquarters of the Chesapeake Bay
Foundation and is
presently the only office building in the world to be platinum certified by
the U.S.
Green Building Council's program _Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design _ (http://www.usgbc.org/LEED/LEED_main.asp)
(LEED). (http://www.epa.gov/epahome/exitepa.htm) Some of its outstanding
features are an extensive rainwater collection
system which is used for non-potable purposes such as dish and floor washing,
compostable toilets, waterless urinals, natural ventilation, geothermal heat
exchange, structural insulation panels, and solar panels. The center has
added a new
green feature, a vegetated roof for cooling and reducing storm water runoff
impacts.
More about the Center:
_http://www.cbf.org/site/PageServer?_
(http://www.cbf.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_sub_merrill&JServSessionI…)
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