So you thought smoking cigarettes was bad for your health?
Try living next to a coal-fired power plant.
That’s the diagnosis Physicians for Social Responsibility
(PSR) relayed to the public in a comprehensive medical study released on
November 18, called Coal’s Assault on
Human Health. In it, the organization, comprised of physicians and public
health experts, claims that coal pollutants damage every major organ in the
human body and contributes to four of the top five leading causes of death in
the United States.
Not since NASA’s James Hansen rang the global warming alarm
about coal’s major contribution to climate change has there been a more dire
call to shut down coal operations in the United States. It is not simply about
cleaning up the coal process; it is about halting its production altogether in
order to immediately save lives.
At every stage in its life cycle, coal can negatively impact
human health, from mining operations, cleaning, transportation to burning and
disposing of the combustion waste. PSR reports that many Americans are being
affected daily by coal and the exposure is contributing to horrible health
problems; heart attacks, lung cancer, strokes, asthma among others.
“The findings of this report are clear: while the U.S.
relies heavily on coal for its energy needs, the consequences of that reliance
for our health are grave,” said Dr. Alan H. Lockwood, a principal author of the
report and a professor of neurology at the University at Buffalo.
Recently CoalSwarm*, an environmental group that monitors
coal issues, released a list of 126 coal-fired power plants that are surrounded
by 10,000 people or more living within a three-mile radius. Most of these
hundreds of thousands of Americans are being exposed to deadly coal
particulates without even knowing it.
The majority of the plants are not equipped with the most up
to date sulfur dioxide (S02) reduction equipment, which contributes to lung and
heart disease. However, instead of upgrading this technology on coal burners,
which can cost hundreds of millions of dollar, a growing number of activists in
the Climate Change movement are pushing for facilities to be closed instead, for
the upgrades are essentially prolonging the life of plants that are still
polluting in many other ways.
The Obama administration does not seem to be listening. Last
June the Department of Energy poured $1 billion into relaunching FutureGen, a
project that intends to show how a plant can capture carbon emissions.
“The FutureGen project holds great promise as a flagship
facility to demonstrate carbon capture and storage at commercial scale,” U.S
Secretary of Energy Steven Chu said at the time. “Developing this technology is
critically important for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. and
around the world.”
Chu espouses the notion that coal can be clean, but the
FutureGen endeavor, like all other “clean coal” projects, is greenwashing at
its dirtiest.
Whenever coal is burned it releases numerous toxins and
these pollutants have to go somewhere. If not into the air they will be have to
be captured and buried underground, most likely in communities that do not have
the resources to fight the coal waste depositories.
Indeed, the coal industry is spending $35 million annually
to promote their clean-coal technology, which at this point is nothing more
than an advertising motto conjured up by highly paid PR firms.
However, the money coal companies are spending, not only on
public relations but also on lobbying, seem to be paying off. The current
climate legislation hurtling its way through Congress is laden with huge
subsidies for the coal industry.
Last May, when the House of Representatives released a
version of the climate bill it became clear in which direction the law was
heading. In Section 114 of the draft, the coal lobby was able to shore up $11
billion over the next 10 years in a new carbon tax that coal companies would
collect and then spend through a private corporation they operate and control.
The money would finance, not renewable energy sources, but new coal-fired power
plants.
While politicians and industry folks believe coal ought to
be a part of our energy future, others admittedly disagree.
The PSR report is a ringing call that our current addiction
to dirty coal is not only unsustainable and a major source of global warming
pollution, it is also extremely deadly to human life. No matter how much money
the coal industry throws at the issue, either in an attempt to mitigate coal’s
contribution to health problems or to have us believe that coal can be “clean”
-- people are dying, approximately 24,000 every single year.
“These stark conclusions leave no room for doubt or delay,”
says Kristen Welker-Hood, PSR’s director of environment and health programs. “The
time has come for our nation to establish a health-driven energy policy that
replaces our dependence on coal with clean, safe alternatives. Business as
usual is extracting a deadly price on our health. Coal is no longer an option.”
*This author has
contributed research to CoalSwarm.
Joshua Frank is the author of “Left Out! How
Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush” (Common Courage Press, 2005), and along
with Jeffrey St. Clair, the editor of Red State Rebels: “Tales of Grassroots
Resistance in the Heartland.”