Bad ideas, like Sauron, never truly die.
JBK
>>> Kathy Andria <kathyandria(a)GMAIL.COM> 10/31/2008 1:48 PM >>>
Posted on Fri, Oct. 31, 2008
Coal plant backers see new hope in a new president By DAVID MERCER
Associated Press Writer
When the U.S. Department of Energy scrapped plans to build an experimental
coal-fired power plant in a corn field outside Mattoon, citing ballooning
costs, the project appeared dead.
But an alliance of power and coal companies that had …
[View More]worked with the
government on the project, dubbed FutureGen, stuck together. Their allies in
Washington pulled strings to keep the project breathing - though just barely
- long enough to let President Bush's successor consider it.
Now the FutureGen Alliance, which chose Mattoon over a site in Texas,
believes there is a good chance to revive plans to build the plant, which
would test whether greenhouse gases could be stored underground instead of
sent out smokestacks.
"We're awaiting the change of administration, I'll put it that way," said
Mike Mudd, chief executive of the FutureGen Alliance.
Members talk regularly to policy experts on the campaign staffs for Sens.
Barack Obama and John McCain, pushing the idea that FutureGen should be a
national priority, Mudd said.
"The message that we have been delivering and will just ratchet up is that
FutureGen at Mattoon is not just a public works project in Illinois," he
said.
Sen. Dick Durbin, one of the project's most vocal backers, said he believes
Mattoon has a chance with either candidate, "perhaps a little better chance
with Sen. Obama."
Neither campaign responded to a request for comment from The Associated
Press, but Obama and McCain repeatedly talked during their last televised
debate about the merits of clean-coal technology to control carbon-dioxide
emissions.
Obama has expressed support for building FutureGen in his home state, while
McCain and running-mate Sarah Palin have pledged to spend billions to
develop technology to capture and stores the carbon from coal.
That's what FutureGen, launched in 2003 by President Bush, was designed to
do.
But the plan - which called for building the plant at one site - was falling
out of favor with the Energy Department even before Mudd announced in
December that Mattoon, a town of 17,000 about 50 miles south of Champaign,
had been selected.
Then the DOE, which was going to cover 74 percent of the costs, scrapped the
project in January, complaining that its projected price tag had increased
from $950 million to $1.8 billion. But the project's backers rejected the
cost argument, blaming Bush's Texas roots and the snub of two sites in that
state.
The agency later announced plans to spend $1.3 billion on carbon-capture
technology at several still-to-be-selected sites around the country.
DOE spokesman John Grasser said the agency is reviewing "several" bids from
interested builders and plans to announce the next step for that project in
December.
Still, Mudd and Mattoon officials believe they could keep the original plan
alive.
Angela Griffin, the president of the local economic development group Coles
Together, says FutureGen and its prospects come up at every business
meeting.
"Regardless of the nature of the meeting, it always comes up - 'Where are
we? What are we doing? What can we expect with the next administration?'"
she said. "We've had tremendous optimism in the county and in the region,
frankly, for a new administration doing the right thing."
One of the reasons they're optimistic is the support they've gotten from
Durbin, the Senate's No. 2 Democrat.
Durbin, who complained bitterly that the decision to shelve the plan to
build FutureGen at Mattoon was driven by Bush and other Texans in his
administration, convinced the Senate Appropriations Committee to set aside
more than $134 million in federal money for FutureGen into 2009.
Durbin also threatened to block any nominations the president makes to the
Energy Department through the end of Bush's term because of the
administration's withdrawal from the project.
"I think Sen. Durbin last summer made a very strong case in Illinois and
Washington that this project was needed and that he was going to continue to
watch what was happening and help," said John Mead, director of the Coal
Research Center at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. "Coming from
somebody in leadership, that means a lot. I think that's very important."
The Illinois congressional delegation and the companies behind the project
also gathered congressional and coal-industry allies in key coal states such
as Wyoming and Kentucky.
Project supporters and outside observers, like Massachusetts Institute of
Technology professor Howard Herzog, also note that the Mattoon site was
already well into the planning stages when the DOE walked away.
"The biggest reason I think that FutureGen mattered was it was the most
advanced along the way, and I think there is some time urgency," said
Herzog, who last year co-authored a study on the future of coal power. "We
start hearing from the scientific community that we need to put the
technologies in place sooner rather than later."
On Oct. 20 the International Energy Agency said the world's most
industrialized countries, including the United States, aren't doing nearly
enough work on carbon-capture projects to make the technology viable. The
agency, which makes energy policy recommendations for its 28 member
countries, said the world needs 20 demonstration projects over the next
decade.
Even if a new president does revive FutureGen, it'll be years before it's up
and running.
That's why Durbin hopes FutureGen will be in the next president's first
budget, something Congress typically gets its initial look at in February.
And if all goes well, Mudd would like to start building in 2010 and have the
plant running by 2013.
Although environmentalists have mixed feelings on clean-coal technology,
many say it's clear that coal is not going to disappear as a source of
electricity.
"Regardless of which candidate receives the majority of votes on November
4th, on November 5th the majority of the United States' electricity is still
going to be coming from coal," said John Thompson, a Carbondale, Ill.,
resident and a member of the Massachusetts-based Clean Air Task Force. "If
we don't change the way coal is used, it's gonna' kill us."
Associated Press Writer Jim Suhr contributed to this article from St. Louis.
(c) 2007 Belleville News-Democrat and wire service sources. All Rights
Reserved. http://www.belleville.com
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[View Less]
Attached is a new report by Tom Sanzillo of the firm TR Rose Associates done for the Conservation Voters of South Carolina regarding the Santee Cooper power plants in South Carolina. The financial analysis is devastating to coal-fired power plants, with the concern that these plants are being hit by a triple whammy of increased construction costs, long-term increases in fuel costs, and the virtual certainty of carbon mitigation costs. It calls for full disclosure of these costs and financial …
[View More]risks to investors and ratepayers.
I suggest that we might want to take this approach with the PSC, provided we get the right consultants, on the PATH hearings. In fact, we might want to launch a pre-emptive strike by getting this issue into the media now, and do whatever we can to force the PSC to deal with it in upcoming proceedings.
Whaddya Tink?
Jim Kotcon
[View Less]
Folks - do we want to sign and send this letter?
Jim Sconyers
jim_scon(a)yahoo.com
603.969.6712
Remember: Mother Nature bats last.
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: John Hartz <Hartzjm1(a)AOL.COM>
To: CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS(a)LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG
Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2008 1:37:21 PM
Subject: Please sign onto GNEP comment extension letter!
FYI
________________________________
-----Original Message-----
From: Nickolas Roth <nroth(a)ananuclear.org>
To: …
[View More]bananas(a)ananuclear.drizzlehosting.com
Sent: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 12:30 pm
Subject: [Bananas] Please sign onto GNEP comment extension letter!
To all,
Tomorrow is the deadline for signing onto the letter to DOE requesting an extension to the GNEP PEIS comment period. More than local and national 20 groups have signed on. If you have already signed on, YOU ROCK! If you have not yet done so, FOR SHAME. However, there is still time. Be part of a growing movement! Sign today!
Thanks,
Nick
Samuel Bodman
Secretary of Energy
1000 Independence Ave, SW
Washington, DC 20585
Dear Mr. Bodman,
On behalf of our members, the undersigned local and national environmental, peace and security, taxpayer and public health organizations, we request a 120-day extension to the comment period for the Draft Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) programmatic environmental impact statement currently scheduled to end on December 16, 2008, before the final PEIS is released.
We believe this extension is warranted because (1) Department of Energy (DOE) failed to provide analysis of nonproliferation impacts within the PEIS even though DOE had indicated that this important assessment would be made available in conjunction with the PEIS, (2) reference materials cited in the PEIS have not been made available for review, (3) the proposal is technically complex with national implications, and (4) the comment period coincides with the upcoming Presidential elections, and holidays, which may make it more difficult for the public to review and comment on the PEIS.
Most significantly, DOE has failed to provide any nonproliferation analysis within the EIS. Instead, the PEIS simply states that a separate assessment of the nonproliferation aspects of the programmatic alternatives is being prepared and that it “will be considered by DOE in decisions regarding the GNEP proposal.” No timetable is given for the documents release other than “in the same time frame as this Draft GNEP PEIS.” Given that the nonproliferation impacts of GNEP are one of the most important aspects of the program, the public cannot adequately comment on the GNEP proposal until a complete nonproliferation impact analysis is provided. Once the nonproliferation analysis is released, the public needs adequate time to review and comment.
Furthermore, the DOE GNEP website contains a 22-page index to the draft PEIS references (http://www.gnep.energy.gov/peis/Draft_PEIS/ReferenceIndex.pdf), but does not make all of these reference documents accessible to the public. Reference documents should be more than just publicly available; they need to be easily accessible. All of the reference documents cited in the 22-page index need to be posted online. After that, the public will need additional time for the documents to be read.
In addition, the comment period is insufficient to enable the public to thoroughly review and comment on this highly technical and enormous document. DOE acknowledges in the Draft PEIS that GNEP affects “the entire United States because facilities associated with the programmatic alternatives could be deployed anywhere in the country” and that the “PEIS involves a technically complex subject matter with unique concepts and terminology.” In 2007, the national scale and complex nature of the GNEP proposal required a scoping period of 151 days, which resulted in an unprecedented 14,000 comments submitted to DOE. The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requires that public scoping comments must be at least 30 days (10 CFR 1021.311(c)) and that public comment on a draft EIS must be at least 45 days (10 CFR 1021.313(a)). The intent of this regulation is that the public comment period for the draft EIS be longer than the scoping
comment period. Since the GNEP scoping comment period was 151 days, the public comment period on the draft PEIS should be longer, at least 180 days.
Finally, the current period allotted for public comment spans the last few weeks of an historic presidential and congressional election, followed by turbulent period of transition between old and new administrations, and also includes a large part of the holiday season. This is the worst possible time for members of the public and interested agencies to be attempting to review and comment on a complex document such as this, on such a sensitive and controversial subject, and without any of the supporting documentation yet made available to the public. The new teams coming into DOE and other relevant executive agencies, and new members of Congress and their staffs, deserve adequate time to review and comment on the PEIS before the agency moves to a Record of Decision. In order to bring the national public’s attention to the GNEP proposal and allow sufficient time to respond to the draft PEIS, an extension of the comment period is essential.
Therefore, we ask that the comment period extend well into the New Year.
Failure to provide adequate time for public review and comment on the draft PEIS, nonproliferation impact statement, and all EIS supplementary references would marginalize and compromise the public’s role as an essential participant in the NEPA process. It would have a further negative impact on the Department’s ability to assess the impacts of the vast GNEP proposal.
We believe that the requested 120-day extension is necessary and reasonable. It would allow for the distribution of the nonproliferation impact statement, associated reference materials, and provide adequate time for the public to provide comments to DOE.
Thank you for your consideration,
Nickolas Roth
Program Director
Alliance for Nuclear Accountability
322 4th Street NE
Washington, DC 20002
(p)202-544-0217
(f)
202-544-6143
________________________________
Plan your next getaway with AOL Travel. Check out Today's Hot 5 Travel Deals!- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To unsubscribe from the CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS list, send any message to:
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[View Less]
fyi, paul
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mark Kresowik <mkresowiksc(a)earthlink.net>
Date: Tue, Oct 28, 2008 at 5:40 PM
Subject: Thursday webinar on coops, munis, and coal financing
To: COAL-CAMPAIGN-ALERTS(a)lists.sierraclub.org
Friends,
There is a great opportunity to learn more and hone your activist skills -
whether fighting coal plants, promoting clean energy, or encouraging
corporate accountability - on Thursday, October 30th at 3 PM EDT. The
director of the …
[View More]Sierra Club's National Coal Campaign, Bruce Nilles, and
former First Deputy Comptroller for the State of New York Tom Sanzillo will
give a webinar on electric cooperatives and public power involvement in the
coal rush. They will also go over strategies and tools to target financing
and decision-making processes for coops and munis. This webinar is part of
the Energy Foundation's series to foster common approaches toward greening
Rural Electric Cooperatives, Municipal Utilities and other public entities.
The first call on the series (October 14th) can be listened to/viewed at
this link: https://cc.readytalk.com/play?id=o26hzy9y.
I definitely recommend joining us on Thursday at 3:00 PM Eastern Time. More
info and call/online info below:
The Coal Rush and Public Power
Date/Time: Thursday, October 30th at 2pm Central time
(3pm Eastern; 1pm Rocky Mountain, 12pm Pacific).
Presenters: Tom Sanzillo and Bruce Nilles of the Sierra Club's National Coal
Campaign
Duration: 90 minutes.
It is not necessary to register.
We will be using ReadyTalk web and telephone conference service. ReadyTalk
is accessible at: http://www.ReadyTalk.com. The toll-free conferencing
number is: 866-740-1260. The access code will be: 6619009
If you have any questions - or can't make this call and would like the link
when it is available - please email me at mark.kresowik(a)sierraclub.org.
Thanks!
Mark
Mark Kresowik
Corporate Accountability Representative
Sierra Club's National Coal Campaign
mark.kresowik(a)sierraclub.org
319-621-7393 (cell)
608-257-4994, x118 (work)
608-257-3513 (fax)
122 W. Washington Ave. Suite 830
Madison, WI 53703
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To unsubscribe from the COAL-CAMPAIGN-ALERTS list, send any message to:
COAL-CAMPAIGN-ALERTS-signoff-request(a)LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG
Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp
To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-6975
"There is no forward until you have gone back" ~Buddha
[View Less]
Maya:
Oh, my God, we have to do something about this. We can't let this
pass. We are sitting ducks here in Kanawha Valley. Expendable people.
Another Bhopal in the making.
Regina
Maya Nye wrote:
> Bayer Communication Issues Continue, County Officials Say
>
> Posted: 5:15 PM Oct 27, 2008
> Last Updated: 7:32 PM Oct 27, 2008
> Reporter: Mike Waterhouse
> Email Address:mike.waterhouse@wsaz.com
> <http://www.wsaz.com/news/headlines/mailto:mike.waterhouse@wsaz.…
[View More]com?subject=…>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> A
> <http://gray.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=Bayer+Commun…> | A
> <http://gray.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=Bayer+Commun…> | A
> <http://gray.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=Bayer+Commun…>
>
> KANAWHA COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- Kanawha County's emergency services
> director says he should have been informed about a minor situation
> involving the chemical MIC at the Bayer CropScience Plant in Institute.
>
> In fact, county officials say the first they heard about it is when
> WSAZ.com contacted them about it.
>
>
> MIC, short for methyl isocyanate, is an extremely toxic chemical used
> in the production of some pesticides.
>
> Tom Dover, spokesperson for Bayer, confirms a tank associated with MIC
> storage was opened during inspections in the west side of the plant,
> but says the amount of chemical leaked was far below reporting levels.
> The situation happened near the end of September.
>
> Workers took action after smelling the odor of MIC, which Dover says
> has a strong smell even at very low levels. Employees then left the
> area and several were checked out at the plant's medical facility. One
> contractor then decided on his own to go to an outside hospital after
> his shift. Dover says he was released with nothing found.
>
> Dover tells WSAZ.com there was no harmful exposure of MIC to employees
> or anyone outside the plant. He called this a "non-incident" because
> the levels were not anywhere near dangerous levels.
>
> "At no point was anyone in danger," Dover said.
>
> Dover adds that Bayer would have notified county officials "without
> hesitation" had the amount of MIC reached reportable levels.
>
> Dale Petry, Kanawha County Emergency Services Director, says he's a
> little disturbed that he didn't know about this situation, even if the
> amount of MIC involved did not meet a reportable level.
>
> "I wish I had known about it," said Petry. "Let me make the decision
> whether it should be reported to the public."
>
> Petry says he doesn't think this latest incident will hurt the
> county's relationship with the plant. He wants to continue to work
> with Bayer to improve communication.
>
> Bayer came under fire for its lack of communication to the county
> after an explosion at its Larvin unit in early September. Two workers
> died as a result of the blast. Kanawha County officials say Bayer
> waited hours to release any detailed information about the severity of
> the incident.
>
> As a result of having little information, county officials issued a
> shelter-in-place for the western portion of Kanawha County, affecting
> thousands of people.
>
> Bayer later admitted that it should have provided better information
> during the explosion and agreed to change its notification system.
>
>
>
[View Less]
Greetings: My friend Kate Watters is the executive director of Crude
Accountability. She risks her life to bring information about the pollution
and harm to people caused by oil refineries in Kazakhastan. Her organization
has made a film and it is an entry in a contest sponsored by the World
Bank. *Judging has been extended to this Thursday morning, ending at 9AM*.
A lot of these films are focused on Global Warming. But I am aking you to
help me to pass the word along to ask for your vote …
[View More]for Kate's film, #
76 .."Silence is Betrayal.."
Thank you.
Paul Wilson
p.s. you will probalby need to cut and paste the web address listed below in
Kate's letter.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Kathleen Watters" <
kate(a)crudeaccountability.org>
To: <kate(a)crudeaccountability.org>
Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 7:48 AM
Subject: Vote Now for Crude Accountability's New Film "Silence is
Betrayal...Voices from a Village"
*Vote Now for Crude Accountability's New Film "Silence is
Betrayal…Voices from a Village"*
Crude Accountability invites you to watch our newly released 5-minute
film /Silence is Betrayal…Voices from a Village/, a look at how the
villagers of Berezovka, Kazakhstan are risking their lives to meet the
world's demand for fossil fuels.
The film is an entry in the World Bank's "Vulnerability Exposed: Social
Dimensions of Climate Change" Micro-Documentary Contest, which features
films from around the globe that highlight the social aspects of climate
change. And you can vote the film—listed as Number 76—as your favorite
by visiting www.worldbank.org/sdccfilmcontest
<http://www.worldbank.org/sdccfilmcontest> (Click on View and Vote). Only
the 15 films that receive the most public votes will proceed to the next
level of judging, meaning every vote counts! *Voting ends at 9:00 am,
Thursday, October 30^th .*
As Mark Warford, Director of /Silence is Betrayal/, explains "The brave
struggle by the people of Berezovka, Kazakhstan to save their village
and culture serves as a strong reminder that pointing to fluctuating
weather trends as the primary cause for social displacement belies the
true cause of the disintegration of these communities - a global
dependence on fossil fuels."
Thank you!
Crude Accountability
--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG.
Version: 7.5.549 / Virus Database: 270.8.4/1752 - Release Date: 10/28/2008
10:04 AM
--
Paul Wilson
Sierra Club
504 Jefferson Ave
Charles Town, WV 25414-1130
Phone: 304-725-4360
Cell: 304-279-6975
"There is no forward until you have gone back" ~Buddha
[View Less]
From: mountainpartyexcom(a)googlegroups.com
[mailto:mountainpartyexcom@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Frank Young
Sent: Sunday, October 26, 2008 9:05 PM
To: JesseForWVGovernorGroup(a)yahoogroups.com; Mt. Party executive
committee
Subject: Sierra Club & Jesse Johnson for Governor
Well, although the WV media has apparently totally boycotted the Sierra
Club's endorsement of Jesse, someone noticed:
http://cagreening.blogspot.com/2008/10/jesse-johnson-for-governor-of-wv-
sierra.html