Harry Reid Says No New Coal

Speaking with reporters at a renewable energy conference in Nevada, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced his opposition to the construction of any new coal-fired power plants worldwide.  Says Reid:

There’s not a coal-fired plant in America that’s clean. They’re all dirty.

For more information about the many recent victories leading towards a moratorium on coal, check here.

6 Responses to “Harry Reid Says No New Coal”


  1. 1 joshlynch Aug 19th, 2007 at 10:42 pm

    This is great news. The best part is that his statements were not qualified with any type of wiggle room for ‘clean coal’ IGCC power plants with carbon sequestration. Now is the time when we need to be pushing HARD on politicians to enact an unqualified moratorium on new coal-fired power plants. That is the biggest thing we can achieve to stem the climate crisis.

  2. 2 Daniel Chiotos Aug 20th, 2007 at 5:14 am

    This is great! We can’t be building new coal plants and we have got to be phasing out the coal plants that already exist through using less energy and building renewables. The state I’m living in, WV, will see more death and destruction if we continue to use and mine coal as we’re doing. We’ve got to stop this and ban strip mining as well so the only coal mined is through (safer) deep mining.

    I hope that more Democrats get on board, there is a huge political vaccuum that could be a position of power for the party if more powerful Democrats come out against coal and towards social justice.

  3. 3 Matt Leonard Aug 20th, 2007 at 5:11 pm

    While I think Reid IS making some great, strong stands against coal – he does in fact leave the “wiggle room” for “clean coal” and carbon capture. Maybe his position has changed in the past few weeks, but more likely this article just didn’t reflect previous statements he’s made. Check out the quote below:

    “Because I believe that developing renewable energy in Nevada is far preferable to coal for the sake of our economy, public health and the environment, I will use every means at my disposal to prevent the construction of new coal-fired power plants in Nevada that do not capture and permanently store greenhouse gas emissions,” Reid wrote.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070727/pl_nm/utilities_reid_power_dc

    That said – I think Reid has made some of the biggest steps by any politician on these issues. He seems to be speaking more urgently about climate concerns, and puts efficiency and renewables at the forefront, and “clean coal” (or the myth of) further back.

    I think a lot of why politicians are still leaving the “clean coal” rhetoric in their platforms is simply that it’s not seen as a reasonable, mainstream position yet. I’d bet money many of them (the Reid’s, the Crist’s, the Edwards’ etc) are just trying to not alienate moderate positions, or step so far ahead of their peers that they have the coal industry attacking them from all sides. That’s why it’s up to US to make sure that the “Clean Coal” myth is fully understood as the unrealistic, problematic, fabricated idea that it is.

    Check out these two great recent posts on Grist about the problems of “Clean coal” – from an economic standpoint largely.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/8/17/152348/339
    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/8/19/155322/893

    -Matt

  1. 1 I THINK MINING · Reid of Nevada takes on coal-fired power plants: is he a politician or a leader? Trackback on Aug 20th, 2007 at 4:46 pm
  2. 2 Links on Parade: Life before AC, yet another Green Digg launched, Harry Reid says no new coal, and the US Secretary of Transportation says bicycles are not a form of transportation « Blog Archive « Planetsave | Free Email and Green News Trackback on Aug 20th, 2007 at 9:05 pm
  3. 3 Obama Steps Up…When Will Clinton? « It’s Getting Hot In Here Trackback on Oct 12th, 2007 at 12:54 pm
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About Billy


At the end of 2002, freaked out about the deepening climate crisis, Billy dropped out of Yale University in the middle of his junior year to build a youth movement. He co-founded and led the Energy Action Coalition, which has become the largest youth advocacy organization in the world working on clean energy and global warming issues. Since early 2008, Billy has expanded his work beyond the Energy Action Coalition into a focus on building the green economy and creating green jobs for young people. He has been a consultant for Green for All on their "Green Jobs Now" day of action and developed the idea and campaign to create a Clean Energy Corps, a proposal based on the Civilian Conservation Corps designed to rebuild the country and create millions of new jobs and opportunities for community service. The community service component, The Clean Energy Service Corps, has become law as part of the Serve America Act, and other components of the proposal have been incorporated into the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and the American Clean Energy and Security Act. A serial social entrepreneur, Billy has helped launch dozens of youth, climate and green jobs related organizations and initiatives, including Green Owl Records, a green music label affiliated with Warner Music Group; The Navajo Green Economy Coalition, which recently passed groundbreaking green jobs legislation on the Navajo Nation; and the Alignment Process, a collaborative of 50 large progressive organizations working on passing strong federal legislation to build a green economy and address global warming. Originally from New York City, he now lives with his wife Wahleah Johns and daughter Tohaana in Flagstaff, AZ.

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