You may have heard about the recent kerfluffle surrounding the Obama campaign’s late addition of “clean coal” to the list of energy priorities listed on its website. This has me wondering why so many Dirty Energy politicians are so excited about “clean coal.”

Photo: eutrophication&hypoxia
The premise behind “clean coal” is presumably that coal is inherently dirty, but that if you do enough to deal with all that filth, you can make it clean. Many would argue that coal can never be clean. But, watching the polluter posse’s votes in congress and listening to their rhetoric on the campaign trail, you’d think that coal isn’t even dirty.
Here is just a selection of the recent times when Members of Congress had the chance to go on the record in support of cleaning up coal:
In April 2011, an amendment in the Senate to strip EPA of its ability to reduce the carbon pollution received 50 votes. Since coal fired power plants are a large source of carbon pollution, this was presumed to be part of EPA’s “War on Coal.” The House version of the bill had passed in a vote of 255 to 172.
In October, the House voted on and passed a bill that would prohibit the EPA from setting strict rules on how to dispose of toxic coal ash, which is filled with arsenic, lead and mercury. It passed with 267 votes. The Senate companion already has 13 cosponsors. Pro-coal members are now trying to tuck a version of this bill into the transportation bill, since it is unlikely to be signed into law by President Obama.
In November, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul offered a resolution that would have stopped lifesaving new protections to reduce smog and soot pollution. It garnered 41 votes and fell short of passing.
And now, Senator Jim Inhofe has filed a new resolution to void long-overdue limits on mercury pollution from coal-fired power plants.
There doesn’t seem to be nearly enough support for “clean coal” when I look at this record. Instead, I see politicians who want to ensure that coal never has to get cleaner. From mercury that damages the brains of unborn children to the devastation of mountaintop removal mining to nasty spills of coal waste, some clean coal advocates seem almost eager to look the other way.
Surely some of these clean coal proponents will claim that the coal should be cleaned up, but that coal companies and power plants just need more time to do it. Don’t be fooled. The special resolutions being used to try to stop many of these pollution rules would stop EPA from ever issuing a similar rule again. That likely means that if Senator Inhofe gets his way, mercury at these power plants would spew forth into our families and our environment, without limits, forever.
Montana Senate candidate Denny Rehberg says he wants to make clean coal “safer and more efficient.” Yet, he’s supported each of the efforts above. What does clean coal mean to him?
Pennsylvania Senate candidate Tom Smith is bankrolling his own candidacy with funds he earned as an executive in the coal industry. He sees clean coal as a tremendous opportunity. Do you think he’ll support any of the efforts to actually make coal cleaner?
It’s time to stop the greenwashing. Rebranding dirty old coal as “clean coal” doesn’t magically make the filth disappear. Next time you hear a candidate propound the virtues of clean coal, I urge you to ask whether they see “clean coal” as a real aspiration for improving public health and the environment or just the vessel of another empty promise.



14 Comments

Hey, Heather; I wonder if one of you at NRDC might take the time to give us a report from your club’s representative at the 2012 Bilderberg Summit. I know folks here would like to…hear about it.
The problem is not confusion about clean coal. The problem is democrats have completely and utterly betrayed environmentalists. Environment – http://newprogs.org/blog/2011/11/08/environment-under-democraticrepublican-uni-party
Ha! When I heard Prez O say ‘clean coal’ in his inauguration speech that was the third nail in the coffin. Ain’t no such animal.
These people think so, too.
If it is any consolation, the stock market valuation of coal is miserably low. Few people are buying coal stocks.
Coal is carbon. When you burn it, you get the green-house gas, CO2. So, coal is intrinsically “green.” Right?
“Clean coal” is an oxymoron. “Combustion” is combining a fuel with an oxidant to produce an exothermic reaction. Coal, being almost pure carbon, produces copious amounts of CO2 and some CO, Removing the soot from coal fire discharge does nothing to address the greenhouse gases that are released.
So much so that some envmntlsts are openly talking about how Mitt may be a better president. Strange as it may sound, and I disagree with their take, Mitt passed climate legislation far better than anything Obama and his XDLC buddies have come up with. Mitt passed that stuff because of Massachusetts, I tell them, not because he cares at all about the envmnt. Whatever, the ship is on fire and heading for the waterfalls edge, with both parties turning the rudders in opposite, or the same, direction. Full speed ahead Captain, whoever the Captain is.
Exactly.
Clean coal (with Carbon Dioxide Sequestration) is thermodynamically not possible.
No economist knows how to defeat the second law of thermodynamics.
No politician can bullshit the atoms.
No CEO can demand good results.
it the long term we are all dead. So I fear are our children and grandchildren before their time. All to support some transient greed.
There is no such thing as “clean coal”. Lot of emphasis, though rightfully, is given on CO2 or CO generation with coal burning but that is not enough. It does not grab attention. The focus should be the presence of harmful metals like Mercury, Arsenic, Cadmium, sulfur,,, with varying concentration with specific regions. The impact of these metals should be the focus of discussion (of course it could be regional issue), effect on children, ecosystem, and on life in general. Another issue is the safe disposal of sludge that is produced during pollution abatement processes in coal burning plants. A good idea would be put all these coal burning plants in pro-coal congress members States and possibly next to their ranches or Villas.
The title of this piece is “The Hypocrisy of “Clean Coal”’ – it needs to be changed to “The Fallacy of Clean Coal,”
All fossil fuels are market failures.
True cost accounting would make coal unprofitable.
The problems associated with coal ash disposal are “insurmountable”.
http://www.courierpress.com/news/2011/feb/20/industry-turns-heat-on-epaash-rule/?print=1
China has been putting one or two new coal plants on-line each week for over a decade. About half way through the last decade, the west-coast, pristine, mountain lakes in the Sierra, the Cascades and the Olympics began carrying mercury contamination warnings.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004244996_parkpollution27m.html
Warren Buffet wants to use his newly purchased railroad to haul coal to a proposed terminal in Bellingham, Washington (the only feasible location on the west coast). The coal would then be loaded onto freighters for transport to Asia.
Bellingham was chosen last year by Outside magazine as a top-ten “outdoor” town in America.
Bellingham needs to consider that West Virginia has had the coal industry for over a century and it currently ranks near the bottom of every socio-economic and environmental indicator. Plus, all the coal Bellingham would ship out to Asia is going to eventually float back over the pacific and poison the North Cascades as well as the rest of the west coast.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/energy/2011/10/111020-coal-port-pacific-northwest/
There is no such thing as “clean” coal. It’s fair to say that the atmospheric emissions of sulfur and heavy metals can be cleaned up with current scrubber technology, but nobody has found a way to clean up the disaster left behind by strip mining. Once you open up a mine, the runoff of heavy metals and acids into the ground water goes on forever. If you want to see the effect of strip mining, travel around West Virgina. Tops of mountains are sheard off and when their done, the mining companies just leave and let the local community deal with the problems.
The discharge from coal fired plants is combined with a binder that hardens it and is usually pumped into containment ponds and no one knows what the long term impact of all that sludge will be. Some of the plants use a regenerative process and recover the sulfur from the stack gases. Better, but there is not much of a market for all that sulfur.
Back in the Reagan years I whitewater rafted in West Virginia as it was close to DC where I lived,
I initially was impressed by how “clean” (transparent – clear so you see to the bottom) the rivers were – then I learned that the coal mining gave the rivers an arsenic and acid bath in which nothing – plant or animal – could live – so of course the water was clear.
At the time one of my daughters wrote the speeches for Department of Interior folk (Reagan outsourced everything) but she could never get anything approved that showed concern about this problem – and then left “consulting” to do computer database control and production of reports work.