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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Saturday, July 6, 2013

Dirty Coal is Losing

At the top of this blog, on the left side, is a search feature. There are numerous posts about Mountaintop Removal and its environmental destruction, more than 500 mountains have been destroyed, communities sickened, flooded, their water contaminated.



Americans have remained silent, mostly ignored Dirty Coal's destruction....after all, it wasn't OUR community.




Yet there has been an awakening that WE'RE ALL DOWNWIND!



We're forced to inhale toxic COAL SOOT, forced to live near COAL ASH PILES that potentially threaten our drinking water with their toxicity.

This is a Coal Ash Spill --



Although these figures are outdated, they represent 2010 COAL ASH STORAGE in Massachusetts - in unlined pits --

BRAYTON POINT 190,000,000 POUNDS

SOMERSET 60,100,000 POUNDS

SALEM HARBOR 140,800,00 POUNDS

WEST SPRINGFIELD 40,000,000 POUNDS

MOUNT TOM 75,200,000 POUNDS


FROM:
The Massachusetts Coal Ash Myth

Environmental Terrorism

DIRTY COAL is exempted from cleanup costs. That means - YOU and ME pay to clean up after the DIRTY COAL INDUSTRY.

COAL is DIRTY!

Solar and Wind Energy are cost-competitive and environmentally sensible.
Let's put Americans back to work manufacturing, installing and maintaining CLEAN ENERGY.


The Coal Industry Knows That Enviros Are Winning


| Fri Jul. 5, 2013
 
The coal industry is worried about environmental threats. Not threats like climate change, superstorms, or wildfires. Threats posed by environmentalists.

In May, the American Coal Council—an industry group whose membership includes the biggest coal producers and consumers in the US—hosted a webinar called "What Environmental Activists Are Planning for Coal in 2013." As the invitation put it, "Using social media and community organization tactics, these groups are savvy, motivated and may be off your radar." The industry has begun to refer to this kind of strategy as a "war on coal" that aims to stop pollution from coal-fired power plants.

Meredith Xcelerated Marketing, a New York-based marketing firm that works with businesses like Kraft Foods, Coca-Cola, and Bank of America, put together the presentation on the "environmental threats" posed by groups like 350.org, Sierra Club, and Organizing for America (the activist group spun off from Obama's election campaign). Mother Jones obtained a copy of their slideshow. Using newspaper headlines and promotional materials from environmental groups, MXM's presentation points out all the ways environmental activists have found success in taking on coal.

Ross Parman, who put the presentation together, told Mother Jones by email that MXM doesn't do work for ACC; he just put this presentation together for the council. "I was asked to pull together this really top-level overview of some of the messaging and specific campaigns that have targeted the coal industry," said Parman. "The presentation wasn't intended to focus on environmental activists or messaging about climate change, just the campaigns and messages from 10,000 feet."

What's interesting about this is that it shows that anti-coal activists are winning—and that the coal industry is worried. The industry has used the allegation that government regulators and environmentalists are waging a "war on coal" to fight off any and all attempts to curb emissions from coal-fired power plants. But it's not working.

Luke Popovich, the vice president for communications at the National Mining Association, penned an op-ed in the industry magazine Coal Age on a recent court decision upholding the EPA's regulatory authority on Clean Water Act permits that noted as much. "Anyway, 'war on coal' never resonated with much conviction among ordinary Americans," he wrote. "For them, the EPA keeps the air and water clean, their kids safe."

But Popovich's piece, as Ken Ward at the Charleston Gazette pointed out last month, goes on to call for a doubling down on the rhetorical strategy.

And then, when President Obama announced his climate plan last week, the industry and its allies in Congress, launched into the "war on coal" cries once again. I guess some people never learn.



Kate Sheppard

Reporter
Kate Sheppard is a staff reporter Mother Jones' Washington bureau. For more of her stories, click here. She Tweets here. RSS |



http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2013/07/coal-industry-knows-enviros-are-winning
 

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