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In EPA’s grip, coal industry is headed to Washington

28 Oct 2013

Besieged by the Obama administration and its host of new environmental regulations, the U.S. coal industry is beginning to fight back.
 
Thousands of miners and their families will descend on Washington on Tuesday for the “Count on Coal” rally, bringing with them a simple message for the Environmental Protection Agency and other arms of the federal government that seem intent on relegating the fuel to the ash pile of history.
 
“The message is that there’s a lot of people out there in states that not only mine coal, but rely heavily on coal. There’s a lot of frustration building up at people here in Washington that they aren’t really listening and looking out for them,” said Hal Quinn, president of the National Mining Association, one of the rally’s prime organizers. “It’s a way of life. [Coal miners] are very proud of what they do for this country.”
 
But dark days seem to lie ahead for the fuel that powered the Industrial Revolution and still is responsible for providing about 40 percent of American electricity.
 
Already under economic pressure from the rise — and near record low prices — of natural gas, coal also could fall victim to the Obama administration’s climate change agenda, which the president said is a key goal in his second term.
 
Central to that agenda are regulations put forth by the EPA last month to limit carbon emissions from new power plants. The rules also apply to natural gas facilities, but those plants should be able to meet the new standards easily.
 
For coal, it’s a different story.
 
The EPA has proposed a limit of 1,100 pounds of carbon dioxide per megawatt-hour for coal facilities, a figure the industry and energy analysts say is virtually impossible to meet with current commercially available, financially viable technology.
 
Because of that proposal and others, the administration’s program to fight climate change has become the target of the coal industry and congressional lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.
 
The rally on Capitol Hill will include speeches from prominent coal-state members of Congress, including Democrats such as Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Sen. Mark R. Warner of Virginia.
 
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican who represents the major coal-producing state of Kentucky, also will speak.
 
“Kentucky coal miners have suffered far too much already, and Congress cannot sit idly by and let the EPA unilaterally destroy a vital source of energy and employment. The president’s war on coal is a war on Kentucky jobs,” said McConnell spokesman Robert Steurer.
 
Administration officials say the “war on coal” is fiction. They don’t dispute their desire to greatly reduce carbon emissions, but argue that coal remains, and will remain for the foreseeable future, an irreplaceable part of the nation’s energy portfolio.
 
EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, when announcing her agency’s new regulations, said coal can remain a part of the mix with the right technological breakthroughs.
 
“They have a path forward for the next generation of power plants in this country,” she said last month.
 
 
 
Source: www.washingtontimes.com