October 10, 2007

The following commentary was written by Prof. George Monbiot an appears in the Guardian edition for Tuesday, October 9, 2007. In his column, Prof. Monbiot investigates work got started on Europe's largest open pit coal mine on a green hilltop in Wales when the government says it wants a low-carbon economy, and local residents have mounted huge opposition to the project. This stands in STARK contrast to what was posted to Jim Kunstler in a letter by a former oil and nuclear engineer posted this week.
Monbiot's commentary follows:

Commentary: Britain's New Coal Age

As I watched the machine scraping away the first buckets of soil, one thought kept clanging through my head: "If this is allowed to happen, we might as well give up now." It didn't look like much: just a yellow digger and a couple of trucks taking the earth away. But in a secure compound behind me were the heaviest beasts I have ever seen - 1,300 horsepower or more - lined up and ready to start digging one of the largest opencast (open pit in the U.S.) coal mines in Europe. In Romania perhaps? The Czech Republic? No, on a hilltop in south Wales.

The diggers at Ffos-y-fran, on the outskirts of Merthyr Tydfil, are set to excavate 1,000 acres of land to a depth of 600 feet. There has never been a hole quite like it in Britain, and our government's climate change policies are about to fall into it.

Everything about this scheme is odd. The edge of the site is just 36 meters from the nearest homes, yet there will be no compensation for the owners, and their concerns have been dismissed by the authorities. Though local people have fought the plan, their council, the Welsh government and the Westminster government have collaborated with the developers to force it through, using questionable methods. I have found evidence that suggests to me that a member of Tony Blair's government used false or outdated information to seek to persuade the Welsh administration to approve the pit. Yet perhaps the most remarkable fact is this: outside Merthyr Tydfil, hardly anyone knows it is happening.

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It looks as if we are about to re-enter the coal age. Though the electricity companies spend millions telling us about their investments in renewable energy, at least four of them - E.On, RWE npower, ScottishPower and Scottish and Southern - are developing plans for new coal-burning generators, which produce roughly twice the carbon emissions of gas burners. According to one government document, there are "£20 billion [worth of] of new coal-fired power stations planned to be built in the U.K. before 2020".

The power companies are confident that the government will back them. Its energy white paper, published in May, begins by explaining the need to develop a low-carbon economy. But buried on page 112 is a commitment to "secure the long-term future of coal-fired power generation".

This is justified by the prospect that, one day, carbon emissions might be captured and buried in geological formations: a process known as carbon capture and storage, or CCS. Yet, while the government has asked companies to build a demonstration plant by 2014, there are no firm plans for any commercial venture. The energy white paper admits that "CCS would not be commercially viable unless costs fell substantially ... or unless the carbon price rose sufficiently to provide a larger financial incentive". In a parliamentary debate in May, Alastair Darling, then in charge of energy, acknowledged that the technologies required for CCS "might never become available". We could be stuck with a new generation of coal-burning power stations, approved on the basis of a promise that never materializes, which commit us to massive emissions for 40 years.

There is another policy buried in the white paper that is already being implemented. This is to "maximize economic recovery ... from remaining coal reserves". In 2006, British planning authorities considered 12 applications for new opencast coal mines. They rejected two of them and approved 10. They have done so, the story of Ffos-y-fran shows, with the active support of the government.

At first, the people of Merthyr Tydfil could not understand why their representatives were siding with the developers. Merthyr has a long Labor tradition of social solidarity. While many people lament the passing of the deep mines, opencasting is unpopular. Petitions circulated by the local protest group raised 10,000 signatures. But the council (which is dominated by the Labor party), the Labor assembly member for the area and the Welsh assembly have all helped the mining company to fight the objectors. The answer, it now seems, according to evidence the campaigners have unearthed, is that the Westminster government leaned on the Welsh assembly to force the project through. The assembly in turn might have leaned on the local council.

One thing they are sure of is that it won't do the health of the local people any good. There are 432 local authorities in the United Kingdom. Merthyr is 429th in the life-expectancy table. As a result of the legacy of heavy industry, smoking and bad diet, it has Wales' highest rates of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, strokes and certain heart conditions. All these diseases are exacerbated by air pollution and stress. The pit will be dug into a steep hillside overhanging the town.

To reach the 10.8 million tons of coal they are hoping to extract, the developers must remove 123 million cubic meters of rock. The digging and infilling will last for 17 years, with explosives used to loosen the rock and machines working from 7 a.m. until 11 p.m., generating smoke and dust. While the World Health Organization identifies 57 decibels as causing "serious annoyance", the planning conditions set maximum noise levels at 70 decibels. When local people say that the scheme will ruin their lives, I do not believe they are exaggerating.

They are not the only ones who will be affected. A ton of coal contains 746 kilograms of carbon: burning it produces 2.7 tons of carbon dioxide. This means that the coal in Ffos-y-fran will be responsible for almost 30 million tons of CO2: equivalent to the annual sustainable emissions of 25 million people (sustainable emissions are the quantity the planet's living systems can absorb). The only certain means of preventing climate change is to leave fossil fuels in the ground: when they are dug up, they will be used. This point has been ignored by the government. It has concentrated all its efforts on reducing the demand for fossil fuels, but has done nothing to reduce supply. It still subsidizes exploration for oil and gas and it has been pouring state money into the coal industry.

Miller Argent, the consortium digging the pit, calls Ffos-y-fran a "land reclamation scheme". It will "reclaim circa 1,000 acres of acutely derelict, unsafe, unproductive and unsightly land". By digging out the coal, the company says, it can restore the land without the need for public money. The scheme will also provide "direct employment for over 200 people" and "generate tens of millions of pounds for the local economy and to the benefit of the local community".

There is no doubt that some of the land in the scheme, comprising old workings and spoil heaps, is unsafe. But local people claim that only a small part of the site is acutely derelict. As I saw for myself, much of it consists of moorland and rough pasture, on which sheep graze and the people of Merthyr walk and picnic. "Reclamation would be sensible on some of the worst features," one of the objectors, Leon Stanfield, told me. "But you don't go down 600 feet and blast five days a week to reclaim an area." Today, he says, most opencast coal mines are promoted as reclamation schemes in order to try to win public approval. He calculates that reclamation without coal mining at Ffos-y-fran would take just three years. Because Merthyr Tydfil qualifies for European Objective One funding, the clean-up could be sponsored by the European Union.

The protesters maintain that few of the promised benefits will come to the town. The workers who operate the vast machinery used in opencasting are specialists who tend to move from mine to mine. The pit, local people believe, will blight the area, discouraging businesses from moving there and driving away tourists. One of the campaigners, Terry Evans, took me on to the hill and pointed down to his bungalow - on the other side of the road, 36 meter s away.

As far as I can discover, no other opencasting scheme in recent times comes this close to people's homes. In Scotland, planning rules require a buffer zone of at least 500 meters (1,500 feet). But the people of Merthyr, through an extraordinary omission, have been left without the usual protections: after 12 years of delays, there is still no planning guidance for coal workings in Wales.

In 1997, the Welsh Office planned to publish a technical advice note, laying down the conditions new mines would have to meet. Nothing happened until the Welsh Assembly government was formed. It promised to publish the guidance in 2005, but the note is still only at the draft stage. The delay has been convenient for the developers: had the note been published, obtaining planning permission for schemes such as Ffos-y-fran would have been more difficult.

The draft proposes a separation zone of 350 meters between opencast workings and the nearest homes. It also insists that a health impact assessment is published. Researchers at Cardiff University twice offered to conduct an assessment of the Ffos-y-fran scheme, but the council turned them down on the grounds that "there was no statutory requirement". "We have been denied the protections the technical advice note would have given us," Leon Stanfield told me. "No decision should have been made until it was published." He suspects the note has been deliberately delayed in order to push through Ffos-y-fran and other schemes. When I approached the Welsh government, its spokesperson denied this. She maintained that the assembly is awaiting the results of "further research to look at the close geographical relationship between coal resources in Wales and Welsh communities".

This was not the only issue the objectors found odd. The borough council offered an extraordinary deal to the mining company, Miller Argent. It would allow the company to recoup the costs of making its case at the public inquiry - £800,000 ($1.6 million) - out of the royalties that it would pay the council for the coal. The people of Merthyr, in effect, paid the developers' barristers to argue against them. There was no such support for the objectors: they had to fund their case at the inquiry, which ended in 2004, out of their own pockets. They lost, and the digging began a few weeks ago.

Local people began to suspect that Miller Argent had friends in high places, so they made a freedom of information request. The results astonished them. First they received a letter sent in January 2004 by Stephen Timms, then minister for energy in the Westminster government, to the first minister of Wales, Rhodri Morgan. "My officials," Timms revealed, "have had regular contact with Miller Argent." He wanted the company's application "resolved with the minimum of further delay". Among the advantages he listed was that the mine would help to keep the Aberthaw power station in Barry in business: if it knew it had secure supplies from Ffos-y-fran, the power firm would fit sulphur scrubbers to comply with European rules, which would allow the plant to stay open for longer. This, in turn, would "assure the future" of the Welsh opencasting industry.

The letter is extraordinary in three respects. First, that a minister in a department responsible for cutting carbon emissions (the department for trade and industry) should be supporting an opencast coal-mining scheme on behalf of its developer. Second, that he should be seeking to extend the life of one of the most inefficient coal-burning plants in the U.K. (Aberthaw has been operating since 1971). Third, that Aberthaw uses coal from many sources (50% of it is imported) and it is hard to see why its survival should be dependent on Ffos-y-fran.

And this was not the end of the lobbying. In December 2004, Timms' successor, Mike O'Brien, sent Morgan a second letter. He repeated the pleas Timms made on behalf of Miller Argent. He also used a new argument. Without the Ffos-y-fran scheme, Aberthaw might not be able to stay open, because its ability to bring in coal from abroad is "constrained by port and railway capacity limits".

A few days after I read that letter, I found a document published by O'Brien's department earlier in the same year. It contained the following statement: "Problems were experienced in the year 2000 when demand for imported coal increased substantially ... This has been largely overcome by investment in new rolling stock and some upgrading of rail links ... there appears to be sufficient capacity." As for port constraints that might prevent imports of coal, the document reveals that "there is a surplus of capacity on the west coast" - which includes Wales. It seems to me that O'Brien has used false information to seek to persuade Rhodri Morgan to approve the scheme. When I challenged him, a government spokesman was deputed to tell me that "the letter referred to information that we had at the time. There is no question of Mike O'Brien misleading the minister".

This is not the only support the government has given to coal mining. Between 2000 and 2002 it gave Britain's coal producers £162 million ($324 million) in subsidies, much of which went into big opencast mines. In 2003 and 2004 it gave the industry a further £58.5 million ($117 million).

In late 2006, Blair's government established a body called the Coal Forum, composed of coal producers, electricity companies and government ministers and officials, whose purpose was to lobby for the future of coal. The opencast companies used the forum to rail against the planning laws that allow local people to hold up their schemes and to demand a faster approval process. They asked for a government statement explaining the benefits of a diversity of energy sources, in order to prevent climate policies from favoring gas. They hoped that this would appear in the energy white paper. They have received everything they wanted. We know that the Labor party has a long-standing relationship with coal miners and their unions. Yet, while New Labor has maintained its support for the industry, its allegiance appears to have switched from the workers to the bosses.

To see what will come to Merthyr Tydfil, I visited the Selar opencast scheme in the Neath Valley. It is not quite as big as Ffos-y-fran, but it is hard to convey the size of the hole. From the edge of the pit the monster trucks on the other side were reduced to yellow specks. Despite this breadth, I could not see the bottom. The roads zigzagged down the grey slopes for hundreds of feet until they disappeared beneath the cliff on which I stood. Even from the top of Mynydd Pen-Y-Cae, 1,500 feet above the edge of the hole, the mine dominated the view. I camped on the mountain and watched the lights moving up and down the pit long after dark. When you think of the fuss people make about a few wind turbines, the neglect of this issue seems incomprehensible.

I hope that this will change. I hope that a new mobilization, supporting the people of Merthyr Tydfil and other blighted communities, will stop the government from dragging us back into the coal age.

Intellpuke: What we have here it is a classic case of the greed of the few outweighing, and out influencing, the needs of the many. What we also have here is madness. Kudos to Prof. Monbiot for, you'll pardon the expression, digging up the truth as to what is happening in Ffos-y-fran, Wales.

You can read Prof. Monbiot's column in context here: " target="_blank">www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/oct/09/energy

Return to Coal is Ill-Advised

The recent comments regarding the extraction of the coal under the South Wales coalfield, by MP Huw Irranca-Davies are both naive and ill-advised. Let's face it, in many areas, the only way for the coal to be extracted is by open cast (strip mining) methods.

Open casting methods have been disastrous for the areas in which it has already taken place and my town Merthyr Tydfil is constantly under threat from opencast proposals where there are three separate applications at different stages of the application process. All three sites are significant and valuable, containing wildlife and conservation interests and industrial revolution sites.

This town and the surrounding catchmen

t area would be a lot poorer if one or all three applications were allowed to progress.

With the working of the coal are the emissions of coal dust.

Ultimately, deep coal or open cast mining are neither economically or environmentally viable.

I say, think again and turn toward renew

able sources of energy.

Brian Thomas

Brecon Road, Merthyr Tydfil

Industrial air pollution and the country doctor
Dr Dick van Steenis
Dr van Steenis is a world expert on pollution matters.

Well over 18 common diseases involving perhaps 149,000 deaths a year could be conservatively linked to the results of industrial air pollution in the UK, at a cost of some £19 billion annually, representing 40% of the total NHS budget, plus social security and social costs. A recent French hospital survey also found 40% attendances linked to industrial pollution. In Wales, waiting lists to see a hospital consultant rose 800% in the 4 years to October 2001. Regarding cigarettes, the tax collected exceeds the estimated medical damage, similarly fuel tax is greater than health damage from vehicle pollution, but the NHS is subsidising industrial air polluters. The rationale began as "deaths for jobs", but became "deaths and misery" for excess maximised profits, sometimes linked to "conflict-of-interest payments".

This is long, indepth, really, REALLY and the rest can be read at the link above. MOST INFORMATIVE ON ALL KINDS OF POLLUTION. Includes sections on the following

To clarify the results of the industrial air pollution on disease patterns, I now list some of the effects.

ASTHMA.

HEART ATTACKS AND STROKES.

CANCERS

An incinerator at Killamarsh near Sheffield burned 20 tons of arsenate in a 6 month period with high soil levels confirming excess emissions. In 1986 a Berkshire fire by a reactor was apparently cooled with water from an adjacent lake. Subsequently the lake was infilled, and new houses erected upon it. Large number of victims of leukaemia (with >400 deaths) and other cancers ensued between Earley and Bracknell . Analysis of property soil and dust samples confirmed levels of manmade plutonium 2391240 some 1000 times background levels elsewhere in UK , with presence of other manmade nucleotides as one might expect. The effects on breast and other cancer incidence resulting from hormone manipulation by tablet or oestrogen-mimics in non-organic food also need further rigorous investigation. With print and sewage waste & kiln dust from toxic waste burning cement works laden with arsenic being dumped on farmland, plus grounding of dioxins and other emissions, there is plenty of scope for contaminated milk and other food. Crankcase oils in the feed, colorants and banned pesticides hardly made for safe salmon. The FSA admitted in 2001 that UK milk contains PCBs & dioxins, which accumulate.

DEPRESSION. OBESITY

HYPOTHYROIDISM

ENDOMETRIOSIS

DIABETES

POLYMYALGIA RHEUMATICA AND SOME REACTIVE ARTHRITIS

BIRTH DEFECTS, PERINATAL DEATHS, and INFANT MORTALITY.


CARBON MONOXIDE AND HYDROGEN SULPHIDE

GRANULOMATOUS CONDITIONS

AUTISM, ME, CFS, VIRUSES

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