- Coal mining faces the prospect of tighter regulation to restore streams in order to reduce aquifer pollution.
- Arch Coal, the most diversified coal mining company in the U.S. is about to be delisted by the NYSE.
- Coal's dirty nature and regulations at the federal level are having major effects across the industry.
- Maryland claims to have the toughest clean air regulations on the east coast, and they just added some additional restrictions on NOx emissions,
but there are still seven coal powered electric plants in the state. Having the toughest air pollution restrictions on the east coast is admirable, but Baltimore still suffers from unhealthy air (a plight common to 85% of the world's population).
Yet, the nominally cleaner natural gas has its own set of problems. In the way of pollution, its greenhouse gas effect is 30 times worse, pound for pound, than CO2. It sometimes (more than we realize) gets loose on its own, like the 1 cubic mile of 1,500 psi gas being released from cracks that recently developed in a storage facility pipe under Los Angeles. As I pointed out in my last post, the prospect of less fracking (who wants to live in Oklahoma now, earthquake center of the U.S?) and the need to follow-through with plans to reduce global emissions makes investment in more gas-powered generation look pretty short-sighted. Solar and off-shore wind are looking better and better.
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