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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Down To Earth

This is mountaintop removal mining

Earlier in the week I posted NASA photos of mountaintop removal mining but you have to see this clip, narrated by Susan Sarandon, from the Rainforest Action Network to get the full picture. It really is an American tragedy.
 



Did you know that mountain top removal accounts for just seven percent of the coal burned in the country?

Christopher Mims at Grist writes: If most of us have a notion of mountaintop-removal mining, it's that somewhere in Appalachia a bunch of extras from Winter's Bone are getting their view spoiled by some trucks and TNT. But these are real people, and the environmental catastrophe they're experiencing -- entire counties turned into flattened moonscapes like you'd expect after a nuclear bomb -- is entirely unnecessary, even for a country as coal-addicted as the United States.

If you remember one thing from this video, it should be this: only 7 percent of our nation's coal comes from mountaintop-removal mining. The U.S. is also a significant exporter of coal. So ending the practice isn't about endangering jobs (wind power, which could be sited on the same mountains they're blowing up, generates significantly more) or energy security. It's about ending a practice that poisons the water, irreparably damages millions of acres of land, and enriches sociopaths like Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship.

Last week more than 150 people from 23 states and directly impacted communities in Appalachia converged in Washington DC to give Congress to help keep mountaintop removal riders out of the federal budget. Score one against the coal lobby.



Down To Earth

The DTE blog is committed to reporting and sharing environmental news and sustainability information from across the Inland Northwest.