In the recent issue of our
local rural power cooperative's publication, Ruralite, the
National Rural Electric Cooperative tried to convince us that coal is
still a cheap source of power. I appreciate their efforts to keep
electric bills affordable. However, just because they are heavily
invested in coal doesn't mean Mt. Wheeler Power has to live by their
flawed economic calculations. In the real world, coal is far more
expensive than the coal industry wants us to know. The reason your
coal fired power bill seems cheap is because they have been taking
some of their profits from your taxes (and worse, they have left you
with the bill for dealing with their poisonous and climate altering
wastes).
Since 1950, the U.S.
Government has provided the coal burning industry with over
$70 billion in tax breaks and subsidies. Additionally, over the
past 30 years, coal mining
has received almost $30
billion in U.S. subsidies. Our tax dollars are being used to make
it appear that coal power is cheap. They are using our
own money to hoodwink us. Face it; there is no legitimate reason
financially successful companies should be receiving absurd subsidies
such as this. This isn't free market economics, it's welfare for
established monopolistic industries! Every tax-paying American is
being forced to support an industry that is taking our
nation's resources to pollute the rest of our resources.
...Eventually humanity
will have to stop burning coal for power. Either a competing
technology will be better or we will someday run out of coal. Either
way, coal is not a long-term option. (And besides, if
we burn up all that coal for power, how are we going to smelt our
minerals?)
The estimate the coal
industry quoted in this article for how much coal remains in the
ground is practically laughable. “236 years.” Like they were able
to accurately estimate, down to the year; how much coal is left in
the ground and how much America will burn it. What are the error
tolerances? I'd say about 236 years plus or minus 200 years (but most
likely minus).
When I hear of
pie-in-the-sky estimates like this, it reminds me that coal mining
corporations' investment dollars are dependent upon estimates of
recoverable coal reserves. If they say they have a lot of coal,
investors will invest more. The U.S. Energy Information Agency
probably just takes every one of these over-optimistic estimates and
adds them up. Of course, the coal industry doesn't complain because
it gives us a false sense of plenty.
...Nonetheless, the
obvious reality is that this isn't really about the coal. This is
about the money. Ideally, in a more just society; our subsidies
wouldn't be going to the highest bidder. Ideally that $100 billion
would have gone towards the development of safe, reliable,
sustainable energy production. But quite likely, much of those
subsidies ultimately went into the oligarchy's off-shore bank
accounts.
Worldwide, all fossil
fuels together have received half
a trillion dollars in government subsides every year! Could you
imagine where the people of the world would be if we had given those
subsidies to renewable energy companies instead? We would have been
breathing healthier, instead of having to live with a trashed
atmosphere. We would still have the tops of the Appalachians. We
might have still had a reliable climate. But, most important to the
coal industry; we would have been more self-reliant, instead of
reluctantly propping up an industry far past its prime. The coal
industry doesn't want us to be independent. They want us to be
dependent – upon them. And for that, it appears that
they intend to fool us into paying any price.
A Harvard study has
calculated that the hidden cost of coal in America (over and above
what we pay to the power companies) is half
a trillion dollars a year. Somebody's got to pay
for the health care for all those black lung disease patients – and
asthma – and lung disease – and cancer etc.
So, why didn't the author
of this article on coal power want to talk about those costs? My
guess is that they don't want us to think about them. They don't want
to pay for those costs – and as long as they control the focus of
the argument, they don't want us to focus on “externalities.”
“Externalities,” you know; the economists' term for costs they
don't have to pay because... well, they made a deal with our
government. As long as they live within the rules they helped write,
ignoring the consequences of their actions is perfectly legal.
The medical journal Lancet
lists air pollution in its top
10 disease risk factors. And, of course, burning of fossil fuels
is the greatest emitter of air pollution. Environment America
has rated the Intermountain Power Project in Utah the
29th dirtiest power plant in America. That's right,
the coal-fired power plant Mt. Wheeler Power buys most of its
electricity from is one of the dirtiest power plants in the country.
This is what they are trying to prop up.
...The title of the
article in the Ruralite publication I am commenting on is
“When it Comes to Providing Energy, 'All-of-the-Above' Strategy is
Critical.” Or in other words; “give coal some loopholes.” Now
for a moment, think about a term they used; “critical.” When I
think of the word “critical,” I think of the condition of the
most desperate people in hospitals. I think of crisis or emergency.
But if the coal industry doesn't get their absurd subsidies or
environmental loopholes, nobody is going to die. On the other hand,
if they continue to get away with not having to deal with the
consequences of their actions, lots of people are going to die –
lots of people who wouldn't have died, if we weren't burning poisons.
A World Health
Organization study has revealed that 3.3
million people die every year worldwide from outdoor air pollution.
This is an enormous
catastrophic cost. But this cost rarely even gets mentioned. How can
any rational economic system just ignore the highest
cost to humanity? People are dying. A lot of people are dying. If the
fossil fuel industry were shooting these people, the world would be
in an uproar. But since they (and we) are poisoning them; hey, that's
just the cost of doing business?
...I guess if the coal
industry doesn't want to talk about the health effects, most likely
they don't want to talk about the effects on the environment either?
Nope. All the article mentioned was Carbon Sequestration, and...
well, forget about it.
Of course, what we can't
forget about is that coal pollution seriously effects our
environment. For example; the drought in the American West for the
past 13 years has severely effected our water supply. And a
Department of Energy study has shown that coal
soot melts snow pack.
…But that's just an
inconvenience compared to what coal pollution, that witches brew of
tons of dangerous and poisonous chemicals emitted by
every coal-fired power plant (both into the air and onto the ground),
does to plants and animals.
A USGS study has found
widespread
mercury contamination in American “fresh” water. It simply
isn't as safe to eat anything anymore... Nonetheless, mercury is just
one of the many dangerous and poisonous effluents from coal-fired
power plants – even ones with “scrubbers” (because what doesn't
go into the air ends up on the ground).
We've been poisoning
ourselves. We've been allowing others to poison us. But we don't have
to do that any more. Just this one benefit of renewable
energy is absolutely priceless! We no longer have to poison
ourselves, our families, and everyone we know to get electricity.
Even if it cost a little more at first, eventually inflation will
drive the cost of coal generation up – and renewable energy will be
cheaper in the long run.
So, here's the deal; we
can get something priceless for the price of what we're going to have
to do eventually anyway. Any reasonable economic system would favor
wise decisions. But apparently, our economic markets are so perverted
by manipulated laws that somehow poisoning ourselves looks like a
thrifty idea.
The fatal flaw of our
economic system is that we can't seem to think long term. In most
companies, long term planning is five years out. Just five years. But
those five years keep on adding up. Global warming started to become
a real issue back in the '80s. It's been almost 35 years now.
If you were born after
April 1985, you have never
seen a month on Earth cooler than what was once the average Earth
temperature. This has had a direct effect on the quality of your
life. This has had a substantial effect on the quality of life on
Earth. Every ecosystem on the planet is in decline.
I'll say it... We are
already firmly in the grip of climate change.
The price
of food and food security have already been significantly
effected by climate change.
In the West, the
recreation and tourism industry has suffered due to drought,
pestulance, and fire. This will likely get significantly worse
as climate change progresses.
According to the
international humanitarian organization DARA; extreme weather and
climate change are already costing
the world $1.2 trillion a year.
And the Potsdam Institute
for Climate Impact Research claims that if the world puts off
cooperative efforts to fight climate change until 2030, the
costs will triple.
...What costs? There's no
mention of these costs in the National Rural Electric Cooperative
Association article... Personally, I consider that the epitome of
irresponsibility. But that's just how our economic system is focused.
Everybody does it. Unfortunately however, what we ignore in real
world doesn't go away. And if we ignore the consequences of
dumping millions of tons of CO2 into the atmosphere, there will
likely be Hell to pay – starting now and lasting for
a thousand years. Because much of the carbon dioxide we are emitting
will stay
in the atmosphere for the next thousand years.
On top of that, carbon
dioxide can naturally become carbonic acid. Due to the high
concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere, the oceans are becoming more
acidic faster than they have in the past 300 million years (a
period that includes four mass extinctions). Already
some life in the oceans is being disintegrated by this acidic water.
Eventually, and possibly much sooner than we think; we may lose our
coral reefs.
What price would you pay
to keep the oceans' coral reefs? I believe that if we really knew the
consequences of our actions, we might act far more responsibly. Which
is why so many of us must not want to know the consequences of our
actions. Sadly, I have watched for decades as the problem continues
to get worse – while so many people continue to pretend that they
aren't a part of the problem. Our economy, our nation, even our
civilization is now likely at critical risk. (And unlike the coal
industry article, I really mean “critical.”)
We are already seeing vast
methane plumes North of Siberia. Methane is 20 times the
greenhouse gas carbon dioxide is – and there are vast of frozen
methane pockets worldwide on the verge of a tipping point – where
the melted methane could heat the Earth enough to develop a
self-reinforcing cycle of melting even more methane, and more, and
more. Oh, and one more thing, over a 20 year period, methane is 86
times more potent a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
A study printed in the
science publication Nature predicts that by 2050, as many as a
million species may go extinct due to climate
change...
Nobody wants to pay high
power bills. But the cost of coal-fired power has become far higher
than we ever imagined.
The Mt. Wheeler Power
(MWP) cooperative doesn't generate power. They deliver power.
Financially, it doesn't really matter to MWP how our power is
generated – as long as they can make enough money to continue to
provide needed services. Herein lies an opportunity.
MWP already offers wind
generated power. And with net metering, some of us locals could even
generate solar and wind power ourselves – to intermittently be
shared with others here. This provides the opportunity for MWP to be
the middleman between local generators and customers.
Fossil fuels were the fuel
of the 20th century. But they were so successful that
everybody did it. And when everybody does anything, the consequences
pile up. We still need power, however. And photovoltaic solar power
keeps getting cheaper.
In time, inflation will
drive up the price of coal-fired power generation – even if the
coal industry doesn't have to clean up their act. But most renewable
energy is an up-front cost. Which means once it's paid for, there is
nothing to drive up the cost. MWP needs to rethink their business
model. Steptoe Valley is an excellent place to generate photovoltaic
energy. MWP needs to consider power purchase offers for truly clean
power generated right here locally.
The coal-fired power plant
in Utah (where MWP buys its power from) is getting near retirement
age. The time has come to adapt – or suffer the environment and
economy crushing consequences.
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