ARKANSAS
By
RICHARD MASON
Let's Join the War on Dirty Coal
First, just to set
the record straight, I am a natural gas producer, and dirty coal is a competing
fuel.
So I do have a vested interest in putting
the few dirty coal miners that are left out-of-work, but let’s consider the
reasons to join the war on dirty coal, other than my economic ones.
Of course, the out-of-work miners in West Virginia aren't ever going back to
work mining dirty coal, but it's not because of environmental concerns; it’s
because dirty coal simply costs more to use. That’s right, cheap, clean natural
gas is eating dirty coals lunch cost-wise, and over 200 dirty coal-fired plants
have closed during the last few years and more are on the list to be closed.
The environmental problems have only a minor part in the closing.
The war on dirty
coal is one we need to win, because the spoils for winning are lower utility
bills, and a cleaner environment. Maybe, you’re a ‘coal miner’s daughter’ and
you’re in dirty coal’s hip pocket. If that’s the case, you support the use of
dirty, coal-fired generating plants to provide electricity, then you’re on the
hook with all the negatives that come with it. Of course, at a minimum, dirty
coal plants spew out huge amounts of carbon dioxide that contributes to climate
change caused by global warming, but there are a whole host of other problems
in the burning of dirty coal. Take a look at major Chinese cities where
thousands are wearing masks, and the air is so dirty you can’t see the sun. Of,
course their incidences of lung disease are off the wall as well as numerous
other ailments. Yes, dirty coal is a big part of the problem! Are you
okay with that?
But that's not the
main reason I have in joining the war on dirty coal, and that problem is
directly related to what a dirty coal-fired plants put in the atmosphere here
in Arkansas. All dirty coal and dirty, dirty, lignite plants spew thousands of
pounds of mercury into the atmosphere each year, and that vaporized mercury
comes down in the frequent rains we have here in Arkansas. Our weather systems
almost always move from west to east, and that brings the mercury leaden air
from Texas right over Arkansas. Texas has four out of the top five dirty coal
and lignite plants in the nation that emit mercury, and a stunning 4500
pounds of mercury from these plants goes into the atmosphere every year in
Texas, and a lot of that drops into the lakes and rivers in Arkansas. But
Arkansas has nothing to brag about since around 800 pounds of mercury is put
into the air from Arkansas’s three dirty coal-fired plants. As the mercury
contaminates the streams and lakes it entered the food chain at the very
bottom, and is ingested by the smallest organisms. However, the problem with
mercury is very simple. It is not passed through, but stays within the
organism, and when the larger fish in the food chain consume these small fish
the mercury is slowly added to the larger fish until at the upper end of the
food chain in large predatory fish such as bass and catfish it become
concentrated enough to be harmful to humans who consume those fish. That's the
real problem with dirty coal as far as I’m concerned. Numerous studies
have shown the harmful effects of ingesting contaminated fish, and the Arkansas
Department of Health has issued a warning about consuming fish from certain
lakes and streams. Studies have shown babies born from a mother who consumed
more than the recommended amounts of mercury contaminated fish during the early
months of pregnancy are very likely to produce a child with a lowered I.Q. So
that's the big problem with dirty coal fired generating plants.
The combination of
the Texas and Arkansas dirty coal-fired plants and industrialization of America
in the last 50 years has caused the mercury in fish problem. It's a tough
problem to solve, but a good start would be to convert the dirty coal and
lignite burning electrical generating plants in Arkansas and Texas into clean
burning natural gas fired plants. Then our mercury in fish problem would begin
to slowly disappear.
However, we seem
to be taking a step backwards. Arkansas's attorney general is suing the EPA to
stop them from enforcing the new standards that would force these dirty
coal-fired plants to add scrubbers to remove the various harmful elements they
emit, if they continued to burn dirty coal, or have them stitch to clean
burning natural gas, and this week the head of the EPA announced he was
suspending the new rules that would lower the coal-fired plants harmful
emissions. He announced “The War on Coal is over!” Yes, you guessed it: it's
all about making a buck now and facing the consequences later. What we should
be doing is trying to eliminate the use of dirty coal as an electrical
generating fuel, and not trying to dodge regulations that would solve the
problem, and for God's sake don't open National Forests for dirty coal mining
as has been proposed.
Okay, I know most
of us could care less about what mercury will do to us, since we're primarily
adults passed the child bearing age, but what about the young, country girl in
Bradley County who knows nothing about mercury in the fish that she is eating
several times a week while she's pregnant? Consider this: If she hadn't eaten
the mercury contaminated fish, her son or daughter might have become doctor or
an attorney, but instead his lower I Q. will turn him into a high school
dropout. Shouldn't we do something to prevent that from happening? What if
that child was your grandchild?
Arkansas Department of Health: Fish
Notice: Pregnant or Breastfeeding Women, Women Planning to be Pregnant,
and Children under 7 Years of Age--General Public 1. Felsenthal Wildlife Refuge
– including the Saline River up to Stillions Bridge (Union, Bradley, Ashley
Counties) Should not eat largemouth bass (13 inches or longer), flathead
or blue catfish, pickerel, gar, bowfin or drum from this refuge. Should not
eat flathead catfish, gar, bowfin, drum, pickerel or largemouth bass (16
inches in length or longer). No more than 2 meals per month of blue catfish and
largemouth bass (13-16 inches in length) should be eaten from this refuge. 2.
Ouachita River – from Camden to the north border of the Felsenthal Wildlife
Refuge to include all associated ox-bow lakes, backwater and overflow lakes and
barrow ditches (Union, Ouachita, and Calhoun Counties) Should not eat
largemouth bass, flathead catfish, pickerel, gar or bowfin from this river. Should
not eat largemouth bass, flathead catfish, pickerel, gar or bowfin from
this river….
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