Xiaorui
Huang
INTL
407 Environmental JusticeFinal essay: Op-ed
Instructor: Prof. Yvonne Braun
Grade: A+
Industrial
propagandas about mountaintop removal worsen environmental injustice
While
peddling very hard the reclaimablity of MTR sites, coal industry intentionally
hides the severe environmental damage of MTR practices borne by mining
communities.
First,
the industrial propagandas ignore that MTR produces a huge amount of coal waste,
which causes the water pollution. According to data from U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, in around 500 completed MTR sites in Appalachian area, more
than 2,000 miles of valleys and streams are buried in coal waste (qtd. in
Epstein et al. 77). While coal companies “conveniently” dump mining waste in
these valleys and streams, the runoff with high heavy metal concentration often
pollutes water sources of nearby communities. In Kentucky, MTR practices on 293
sites contaminate more than 2500 miles of streams (Epstein et al. 77) Also, a study
shows that many residents in Appalachian mining communities tend to buy bottle
water as both tap and well water is undrinkable due to mining pollution (McSpirit
& Reid 511).
Besides,
the potential causation between MTR and flood is hidden in industrial
propagandas. By clearing forest on the mining sites and changing landform, MTR
greatly impairs the ability of mountains to absorb rainwater and prevent it
from flushing down to nearby communities (Burning
the Future: Coal in America). Consequently, floods and debris flows are more
likely to occur in mining communities due to MTR practices.
Therefore,
if the general public outside Appalachian area perceives the environmental
impacts of MTR through industrial propagandas, they will never know the true
environmental costs that mining communities pay for the national enjoyment of
cheap electricity. Such misinformation allows the environmental injustice
caused by MTR to continue without much public awareness.
Other
than hiding the true disastrous impacts of MTR on local environment, coal
industry also propagates fictitious local economic benefits of MTR, which
persuades the public to connive at the MTR-caused environmental injustice even when
the environmental damage of MTR are revealed.
First,
coal industry falsely claims that even though MTR is less labor intensive, it
increases the productivity of mining, helps coal industry develop and then provide
more jobs (Woods & Gordon 808). This propaganda not only convinces some
politicians but many members of mining communities (Woods & Gordon 807).
Some MTR-advocates even argues that mining communities should endure MTR’s
environmental damage for its employment boost. However, along with the
increasing coal production from 1980s to 2000s, the mining employment in the
Appalachian area actually decreased by 56% (Epstein et al. 84).In this sense,
the increased coal productivity by MTR does not help but decrease mining
employment.
Coal
industry also argues that MTR increases the productivity of coal industry and
contributes to local and state economy, which also contradicts to the reality. For
example, in 2006, while coal mining generated $528 million revenues for
Kentucky, it receives nearly $650 million subsidies from state government (Konty
& Bailey 1). In addition, a significant amount of state expenditure has
been spent on addressing social and environmental issues associated with MTR
(Epstein et al. 90). At local level, poverty rate rises as mining activities
increase while the average educational level and household income decrease (Hendryx
& Ahern 547-48). Thus, MTR and coal industry in general do not help state
and local economy.
Obviously,
coal industry lies about the local economic benefits of MTR. However, mislead general
public are swayed to remain inactive on the environmental injustice issues caused
by MTR.
In
conclusion, industrial propagandas worsen the environmental injustice caused by
MTR in Appalachian mining communities. Under the influences of such propagandas,
the public is barely aware of the true environmental costs paid by Appalachian
mining communities for the cheap national electricity supply. Moreover, the
limited public and political support for addressing the MTR-caused
environmental injustice is swayed by the fictitious local economic benefits of
MTR. Therefore, to address the MTR-caused environmental injustice effectively, more
efforts are called for on raising public awareness of the true environmental
and economic impacts of MTR, as well as of the biases of industrial propagandas.
Burning the future: Coal in
America. Dir. David Novack. Perf. Maria Gunnoe, Bo Webb, Ben
Stout, Billy Sammons. New Video Group, 2008. DVD.
Epstein, Paul, Samir Doshi,
Jonathan Buonocore, Leslie Glustrom, Melissa Ahern, Nancy Reinhart, Beverly
May, Richard Clapp, Richard Heinberg, Benjamin Stout, Michael Hendryx, and
Kevin Eckerle. "Full cost accounting for the life cycle of coal." Annals
of the New York Academy of Sciences 1219.1 (2011): 73-98. Print.
Hendryx , Michael, and Melissa
Ahern. "Mortality in Appalachian Coal Mining Regions: The Value of
Statistical Life Lost." Public Health Reports 124.4 (2009): 541-50.
Print.
Konty, Melissa, and Jason
Bailey. "The Economics of Coal in Kentucky: Current Impacts and Future
Prospects." MACED : Mountain Association for Community Economic
Development. N.p., n.d. Web. 11 Aug. 2012.
<http://www.maced.org/coal/>.
McSpirit, Stephanie, and
Caroline Reid. "Residents' Perceptions of Tap Water and Decisions to
Purchase Bottled Water: A Survey Analysis from the Appalachian, Big Sandy Coal
Mining Region of West Virginia." Society & Natural Resources: An
International Journal 24.5 (2011): 511-20. Print
"Mountaintop Removal and
the EPA, is Congress next? | Energy, Technology, & Policy." Energy,
Technology, & Policy | Writing at the intersection of engineering, science
and public policy for the world's energy challenges.. N.p., n.d. Web. 12
Aug. 2012. <http://webberenergyblog.wordpress.com/2010/04/04/mountaintop-removal-and-the-epa-is-congress-next/>.
Woods, Brad, and Jason Gordon.
"Mountaintop Removal and Job Creation: Exploring the Relationship Using
Spatial Regression." Annals of the Association of American Geographers
101.4 (2011): 806-15. Print.
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