Saturday, January 17, 2009

Has Seliger Flipped Out Or Sold Out ?


The Texas Panhandle is high, flat, nearly treeless and the wind is always blowing there. It is the perfect place for a renewable energy source to be exploited -- wind energy. In fact, wind farms are already beginning to pop up all over the Panhandle. But one thing the area does not have is coal. So why is Panhandle Senator Kel Seliger pushing a bill that would result in the building of new coal-powered energy plants in Texas? Has he lost his mind?

Instead of pushing renewable wind energy which would help the Panhandle economically, Seliger has decided that "clean coal" is the wave of the future. His bill would promote the construction of several large-scale coal-burning power plants in Texas. "This legislation represents a very important first step in making clean coal technology in the state of Texas," Seliger said, and added, "One day, others will look to Texas as the leader in a clean coal world."

That may sound good to some people, but don't be fooled. There are two different definitions of "clean coal". Most environmental groups and the general public think "clean coal" is where a power plant catches all the pollutants (including carbon dioxide) and stores them underground, so that none of them add to air pollution or global climate change.

This kind of technology is not currently available and, if possible at all, would be so expensive that it would make coal power more expensive than any other type -- including renewable energy power.

But the energy industry has a different definition. They think a "clean coal" plant is any power plant that releases less pollution than a plant built before 1990 regulations were put in place. That means a power plant could release tons of pollutants into the air and still be classified as a "clean coal" plant.

This is the definition that Seliger is using. His bill would only require new plants to cut pollution by up to 60%. This type of "clean coal" plant is little more than a public relations campaign that would let the power plants keep on polluting.

And that's not all of the bad news that comes with "clean coal". In addition to its continuing pollution of the air, it also would pollute our soil and water. Consider the case of the Tennessee Valley Authority plant in Harriman, Tennessee (pictured above). At that plant, a retaining wall of a 40-acre pit containing a slurry of coal ash collapsed and covered several hundred acres of land, destroying several houses. The pollution it released was 100 times greater than that from the Exxon Valdez disaster.

"Clean coal" produces just as much of this coal ash as an old-fashioned coal-burning plant, and each new plant would have one of these unlined slurry pits to hold the coal ash produced. This ash contains heavy metals like arsenic and mercury along with known carcinogens. Thomas Burke, an environmental risk expert at Johns Hopkins University, says, "This is hazardous waste, and it should be classified as such." This waste could leach into ground water, even if the pit walls don't collapse.

And we haven't even discussed the scarring of the landscape by strip mining, or the health problems associated with deep-earth mining. Frankly, it seems to me that the so-called "clean coal" plants are not much better than the old-fashioned coal-burning plants. They came up with a new name that makes it sound better, but it's not any better.

Seliger should be ashamed of what he is proposing. Once again, a Republican is putting his corporate buddies before what's good for the people of Texas and his constituents in the Panhandle. Has he gone crazy or just sold out?

1 comment:

  1. Our representative in Congress doesn't even bother trying to look like he does anything for us. He famously told the Dallas Morning News, when asked if he would go to the Marianas as Abramoff's guest again if he knew then what he now knew, he said yes unhesitatingly. And he worked at one point for an end to regulations on the runoff from Arkansas pig farms. The word is 'bought', but as he does the job for the oil companies, they have bought him his seat in congress in perpetuity. In the most recent election, pollwatchers weren't allowed to watch the votes being counted.

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