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profile.gif David Ng is Director of the Advanced Molecular Biology Laboratory at the University of British Columbia - this is a just a fancier way of calling himself a science teacher.

profile.gifBenjamin Cohen is an Asst. Professor of Science, Tech., and Society at the University of Virginia. He studies the place of S & T in environmental history, policy, and ethics. He also writes other stuff.

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Mountaintop Rescue

Category: Mountaintop Coal Removal
Posted on: April 3, 2007 12:00 PM, by Benjamin Cohen

Honestly, I didn't intend to barrage the site with this series of MTR posts, but a lot of news came through in the past few weeks.

One is this New York Times Editorial on Mountaintop removal legal action (I'm also pasting it under the fold). Another is the court case that the editorial refers to (here in full, as an 89 page pdf). This link is a third resource, an Audubon Magazine photo essay. Then we have the postcards I just added earlier today, as a fourth example. Go download them, post them, advertise. Plus, fifth and finally is the post I offered last week about other updates (within which unfolds a whole other series of links, making it hard to count these up).

For the faint of clicking, here is the NYT editorial, in full:

March 29, 2007
Editorial

Mountaintop Rescue


Mountaintop mining is a cheap and ruthlessly efficient way to mine coal: soil and rock are scraped away by enormous machines to expose the buried coal seam, then dumped down the mountainside into the valleys and streams below.

Mountaintop mining has also caused appalling environmental damage in violation of the Clean Water Act. According to a federal study, mountaintop removal has buried or choked 1,200 miles of Appalachian streams and damaged hundreds of square miles of forests.

No recent administration, Democrat or Republican, has made a serious effort to end the dumping, largely in deference to the financial influence of the coal industry and the political influence of Robert Byrd, West Virginia's senior senator. But the Bush administration has gone out of its way to shield the practice. In 2002 and 2004, the Environmental Protection Agency -- confronted with complaints that mountaintop mining violated regulations prohibiting the dumping of mine wastes in streams -- simply changed the regulations to allow it to continue.

Now a federal judge has inspired hopes that this destructive nonsense can be brought to a halt. In a case argued by two advocacy groups, Earthjustice and the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment, Judge Robert Chambers of Federal District Court halted four mountaintop removal projects on the grounds that the Army Corps of Engineers -- which issued permits for the projects -- had failed to demonstrate that the damage would not be irreversible. He also said the corps had failed to conduct the necessary environmental reviews.

Local residents who have watched the destruction of their landscape hope the ruling will lead to tighter regulation of other mountaintop mining proposals. The greater hope is that the government can be persuaded to stop the practice altogether.

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