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What Is Worse Than Coal in Your Stocking? Coal in Your Drinking Water
The water main break in Montgomery County, Maryland had some compelling visuals to it, with water pouring from the ground and drivers trapped in their cars, so it received some treatment on the cable shoutcasts today. It's a good thing, too, because the rupture of a 44 year-old pipe causing this kind of chaos does show the need for infrastructure repairs, not only as part of a larger fiscal stimulus, but to avoid catastrophes and their ancillary costs, and to maintain vital services which will have tangible benefits for years to come.
But a massive coal ash spill like we saw yesterday in Tennessee - the result of a burst dam at a private coal processing plant - is actually far more dangerous with far more lasting consequences, even if the visuals aren't as stellar.
You're talking about hundreds of acres of toxic sludge, the residue plants create by burning coal to produce energy, which includes mercury, arsenic and lead, spilling into the tributaries of the Tennessee River, poisoning the water supply for multiple communities, including Chattanooga.
And it's a direct result of our continued reliance on an industry that makes us sick but uses slick PR terms like "clean coal," happily parroted by politicians of both parties, to maintain viability.
“This spill shows that coal can never be ‘clean,’” said Kate Smolski, Senior Legislative Coordinator for Greenpeace. “If the Exxon Valdez was a symbol of pollution 20 years ago, the Tennessee Coal Spill of 2008 is the symbol of it today.”
| Also in Water | |||
| San Francisco Launches Pioneering GlobalTap 'Refilling Stations' That Are Strangely Similar to, um, Water Fountains Sometimes though, we have to laugh at ourselves a little. And this seems to be one of those moments. Post by Tara Lohan. December 17, 2009. |
Residents of Upstate New York Fight Gas Drilling...With Zombies (Video) "Frac Attack: Dawn of the Watershed" is essentially a zombie PSA with a clear message: Stop gas drilling. Post by Byard Duncan. December 15, 2009. |
Supremes to Decide if Idle Rich's Scenic Ocean Views More Important than Public Beaches, the Environment A popular coastal reclamation program is being threatened by short-sighted scumbags. Post by Joshua Holland. November 24, 2009. |
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