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Recent News on Coal, Energy and Mountaintop Removal Mining and Valley Fills

by Kevin Pentz last modified September-08-2008 10:21 AM
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The following are news articles and blog posts about coal, mountaintop removal mining and valley fills, and energy from a regional, national and global perspective.

The Price of Central Appalachian Coal:

  •  According to the Federal Energy Information Administration the current spot market price for a short ton of central Appalachian coal is $140.
  • Last year at this time the spot market price for a short tom of central Appalachian coal was $50.

 

Articles about Coal:

This year-I mean, since we've been in office, we've spent $2.5 billion on clean coal research. Why? Because it's a good investment to make sure that an abundant supply of energy is available and is in use for a long time coming. That's why we're doing it.

  • Unfortunately there always seems to be a series of coal mining accidents in China:
  1. Flood in Chinese coal mine traps 18 people
  2. Mine gas outburst toll rises to 13 in SW China
  3. 27 die in China coal mine blast

 

Articles about Mountaintop Removal Mining and Valley Fills:

The people of Appalachia have worked in the coal mines for decades. They've been the lifeblood of this country, and the reason our energy is cheap. Now they're being exploited for profit. This is the economic argument that says we should burn coal rather than use cleaner and more socially just alternatives, which would actually be the economic shot in the arm these people need. So much attention is focused on the pollution from burning coal that it's too easy for the casualties of its extraction to be swept under the rug.

 

Articles about Energy:

  • This is a good article comparing the permitting Carbo power-plant in south west Virginia in the late 1950's with the current fights around the permitting of the Dominion Virginia Power’s Virginia City power-plant.

Had I known what I know now, I think I would’ve protested, just because of the land and everything they took,” said Shirley Parrott Purcell, who grew up in this small Russell County community.  (Referring to the Carbo power-plant built in the late 1950's)

  •  Here is an article about a 100 million dollar pilot project in Germany to capture 100,000 tons of carbon dioxide a year from a coal fired power-plant, compress the carbon into a liquid and pump it 3000 feet underground. This will provide 12MW of electricity and 30MW of thermal power, enough for more about 1,000 homes. (That's about a million dollars per home. Sounds like an expensive electricity bill.)

"We're very clear," PNM's Wheeler said. "No new coal." Likewise, nuclear power does not look like an economical option, though the PNM analysis holds open the possibility of changing that if electricity demand in New Mexico rises faster than anticipated.

 

Good news summary

Posted by Dave at September-08-2008 02:29 AM
Thanks, Kevin - that was a very good news summary.

It's great to see what's going on in KY, in other states, and on the federal level and how all of that can impact the work we're doing.

energy from fruit and vegetables

Posted by Richard erasmus at September-17-2008 02:58 PM
I was watching sat3 yesterday evening and i saw a german inserting electrodes into an onion amazingly it gave out .5v at 0.2A.he then tried other fruit and found an apple generated 1v To cut a long story short he inserted five pairs of electrodes and got 5V he tried to power up an ipod but no luck so he worked out if he had 500 apples with the same connections in parrelal he had 5V @ 100 MA it worked itried it and i found that it was true so thats another thing for some genius to work on to save the planet

Go to the source

Posted by martin at September-17-2008 04:29 PM
It would probably most efficient to bypass the "middle-man" and go directly to the apple's source - the sun!