If
you're concerned about the environment and the Greenhouse Effect, take
a look at something
I've recently discovered. Instead of underground mining, the coal companies are now blasting to level
the once-beautiful blue ridge moutains of SW West Virginia. No one's
stopping it. What's next? Leveling the Rockies because
something valuable is there? I guess we'll have to conquor space and
other planets because we're certainly destroying our own.
Before:
After Mountain Top Removal:
(courtesy of Vivian Stockman / www.ohvec.org and Southwings.org)
• Mountaintop removal mining
takes place in states in the central Appalachian region, including West
Virginia, Kentucky, southern Virginia and Tennessee.
• In this destructive process,
entire peaks, mountaintops and ridges are literally blown apart in
order to reach the coal seams that lie underneath. Up to 800 feet
of mountain can be blasted away.
• The resulting millions of tons
of waste rock, dirt, and vegetation are then dumped into the
neighboring valleys and streams.
• These valley fills permanently
bury streams and aquatic habitat under millions of tons of rubble
hundreds of feet high, destroying the entire surrounding ecosystem and
disrupting nearby communities.
• Communities near mountaintop
removal sites experience serious harm from blasting including dust,
noise, and damage to homes and water supplies.
• Over five million pounds of
explosives (two to three million pounds per day in southern West
Virginia alone) are detonated each working day in Appalachia.
• Each blast set by coal
companies to “remove” mountaintops varies in force from ten to one
hundred times the intensity of the Oklahoma City Federal Building
bombing.
• Every eleven and one-half days,
the explosive equivalent of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima is
unleashed upon the mountains of southern West Virginia and eastern
Kentucky.
• People living as far away as 12
miles from mountaintop removal sites have called in complaints about
blasting.
• Coalfield citizens describe
severe dust problems that cause them to be “prisoners in our homes.”
• Dust also comes from the huge
increase in traffic from trucks hauling coal away from the mines –
traffic alone can be extremely dangerous.
• A recent study singles out
mountaintop removal mining and valley fills in West Virginia and
adjacent states as the greatest contributor to earth moving activity in
the United States.
• Communities also experience
increased likelihood of flooding after heavy rainfall events because of
the destruction of forests, decimation of the landscape and compaction
of soil.
• To quote a coalfield resident
on flooding, “We live in fear. The whole hollow is in a state of
anxiety now every time it storms.”
• Communities experience loss and degradation of well water.
• Communities experience loss of
community as homes are bought out and other residents leave.
• Citizens lose a way of
life—mountain culture—that depends on lush forests and healthy
ecosystems and a loss of the independence that it brings.
• Communities experience loss of environmental values that include:
• According to the U.S. Office of
Surface Mining’s own figures, 1,208 miles of streams in Appalachia were
destroyed from 1992 to 2002, and regulators approved 1,603 more valley
fills between 2001 and 2005 that will destroy 535 more miles of streams
- nearly 2000 miles of streams have been damaged or permanently
destroyed by mountaintop removal.
• When past, present and future
areas that have been or will be affected are added together, the
estimated area of forest impacts is 1.4 million acres or approximately
2,200 square miles.
• Forest loss in West Virginia
alone has the potential of directly impacting as many as 244 vertebrate
wildlife species.
• EPA found elevated levels of
sulfate, total and dissolved solids, conductivity, and selenium
downstream from valley fills along with significant changes in aquatic
life.
• The loss of the genetic
diversity “would have a disproportionately large impact on the total
aquatic genetic diversity of the nation.”
• The true cost of mining coal is
borne by the citizens of the Appalachian coalfields and the environment
that supports us all – not the coal industry.
PLEASE HELP US STOP THIS ATROSITY AGAINST OUR ENVIRONMENT, OUR COUNTRY
AND OUR PLANET.