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This news article originally provided by
The Boston Globe
GLOBE EDITORIAL
WHILE THE nation's attention was focused on the nine lives lost
in the deep coal mine of Crandall Canyon in Utah, the Bush
administration has been busy pushing a form of strip mining in
Appalachia that is lethal to land itself. It has proposed a rule
that would explicitly allow mining companies to blast and bulldoze
the tops of mountains and dump rock and dirt debris into streams and
hollows. While this has been going on under existing rules and laws,
critics of the dumping had fought it in courts. With the new rule,
mine owners expect the legal fights to end.
In mountaintop removal mining, explosives or huge earth-movers
strip off topsoil and rock to expose seams of coal prized for its
low sulfur content. In some cases, loggers first cut and remove
trees for lumber, but in other cases the mine owners don't bother
with timbering first. When companies are finished mining, they are
supposed to replace the topsoil, but they often do not, said
Margaret Janes of the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the
Environment in Lewisburg, W.Va.
Also, the surface becomes so compacted by the heavy equipment
that it is "like concrete," Janes said. It will take 200 to 300
years for trees to return to what has been the most diverse
temperate hardwood forest in the world. Streams that are not filled
in become highly polluted.
The alternative to trucking the debris to a nearby stream or
hollow is to move it to unreclaimed mining sites that need fill.
Janes acknowledges that this "might increase the price of the coal a
bit." As things stand, she said, there is no financial incentive for
companies to do the environmentally responsible thing. Companies
compete to provide coal, the fuel for half the country's electricity
generation, as cheaply as possible.
A rule adopted during the Reagan administration in 1983 was
supposed to ban mining within 100 feet of streams, but neither state
nor federal officials have ever enforced it rigorously. According to
an environmental impact statement accompanying the new proposed
rule, mining companies buried 724 miles of streams between 1985 and
2001. The Clinton administration worked to strengthen enforcement of
the 1983 rule but did not have the new regulations completed before
President Clinton left office.
A bill pending in Congress would reinforce the Clean Water Act's
prohibition of dumping industrial waste - including mine waste -
into streams. Congress should pass the measure, even at the cost of
adding to the nation's utility bill. For too long, mining companies,
electric utilities, and ultimately consumers have gotten away
without paying the real cost of coal: devastated landscapes and a
witches' brew of pollutants, from toxic mercury to the carbon
dioxide that is causing global warming. The country should stop
sacrificing Appalachian springs - and forests - to its addiction to
cheap energy.
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