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Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Obama's take on clean coal


Dear EarthTalk: As I understand it, "clean coal" really isn't clean -- yet the Bush administration gushed strongly for it. What is Obama's take? John Zippert, Eutaw, AL

Barack Obama and George W. Bush differ in many ways, but both have embraced so-called "clean coal" for providing an ongoing supply of cheap and readily available energy for electricity generation.

The term "clean coal" is loosely defined as coal that is washed or processed to remove pollutants, so as to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, the leading greenhouse gas, when the coal is burned. Coal-burning plants emit 40 percent of U.S. CO2 pollution -- half of our electricity comes from coal -- so reducing the industry's carbon footprint in any way possible would be a big win for the environment.

Luckily for clean coal advocates, the White House has been and continues to push for its development. Bush's support for clean coal dates back to his first term in office, when he stated that such technologies should be encouraged as a means of reducing dependence on foreign oil. And since taking office, the Obama administration has committed $3.4 billion in stimulus dollars to clean coal projects.

But green groups continue to question the wisdom of relying on coal at all. Coal wreaks environmental havoc, from the coal mines that pollute rivers and streams, to the premature deaths of coal miners from accidents and lung diseases, to the release of greenhouse gases, mercury and other toxins at power plants.

According to Greenpeace, burning coal emits 29 percent more CO2 than does burning oil or natural gas. And coal-fired power plants are the world's largest sources of atmospheric mercury, a known neurotoxin that disperses quickly throughout the environment and into the food chain. Greenpeace says that clean coal technologies will not address this problem, and that there are "no commercially available technologies to prevent mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants." Also, the group says, clean coal will do nothing to mitigate coal mining's damage to wildlife habitat and drinking water sources.

"There is no such thing as 'clean coal' and there never will be," Dan Becker of the Sierra Club told Grist.org. "It's an oxymoron." The Reality Coalition, a group of nonprofits that includes the Sierra Club, has been running TV ads seeking to debunk industry claims that coal can be clean. Green groups also worry that pushing clean coal will only delay the transition to a truly cleaner and greener energy infrastructure based on solar, wind and other emissions-free renewable energy sources.

In April of 2009, environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. questioned the motivations of Obama and other politicians who back clean coal. "The coal industry and the carbon industry in general are the largest contributors to the political process," Kennedy told ABC News. "You don't have politicians representing the American public, but rather the people who finance their campaigns."

Of course, Obama's support for clean coal doesn't negate the fact that he has proposed spending much more on further development of alternative energy sources. He has called for getting 10 percent of U.S. electricity from renewable sources by 2012 and 25 percent by 2025, and has committed upward of $32 billion of stimulus dollars to the cause, according to an analysis by the nonprofit Environment America.

Send your environmental questions to earthtalk@emagazine.com.

Photo: Getty Images

 
Posted by AllGreenEditor


Obama has always been a incrementalist liberal. He accepts a pragmatist approach because he believes that the transitional shift to a fully developed green economy will be the work of a generation. The policy pieces must be put in place cautiously.Despite the growing political momentum to develop soft energy paths, the reality remains that our demands for more electricity use only increases in the global Internet age. This fact makes it certain that we'll still be reliant on a coal and oil based energy system in the near-future.Thus,Obama sees a mixed energy plan,less emphasis on clean coal and nuclear energy, more on developing solar,wind,and geothermal,and conservation the best medium strategy to get there.
The investment into alternative power generating technologies such as nuclear energy may need to be measured against the potential cost when things turn against you as unfortunately happened this year in Japan. Coal prices and coal statistics show developing economies are more likely to increase their investment into & their use of coal mining in coming years because of coal's affordability and ability to quickly meet increasing demands for electricity and steel. www.coalportal.com

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