A Moment of Truth for Appalachia, Obama and EPA on Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining

A moment of truth has arrived for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and President Barack Obama, who has promised “unprecedented steps” to rein in the devastating practice of mountaintop removal coal mining that is wrecking havoc across wide swaths of Appalachian mountains, valleys and communities.

EPA is expected to announce decisions this week on over 100 pending permits for new or expanded coal mining projects utilizing mountaintop removal (MTR), which uses huge amounts of explosives to decapitate mountains and access the coal beneath, dumping the remains of these once-verdant Appalachian peaks directly on top of neighboring valleys and streams.

Mountaintop removal mining has already buried more than 800 miles of Appalachian streams and destroyed hundreds of square miles of woodlands in one of America’s biodiversity hotspots, all while both the U.S. EPA and state environmental agencies have done little to curtail the practice. That’s left it to activists to slow these projects down and prevent their irreversible damages.

But if recent news that the EPA is seeking to revoke the permit for the largest mountaintop removal mining project in West Virginia history is any indicator, the agency may finally be earning the “Protection” part of their name.

With a self-imposed, September 8th deadline now expired, the EPA is expected to issue an “initial list” this week identifying pending mountaintop removal projects that pose potential environmental concerns.

The projects under EPA review have already been approved by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps), which has primary responsibility for approving surface mining projects. Any projects that EPA decides will have no “significant” environmental impact will sail forward “without further coordination with EPA,” according to agency procedures (kindly explained by Coal Tattoo‘s Ken Ward Jr. here).

Projects posing an environmental risk – and any sane person is hard pressed to explain how blowing up a mountain has no environmental impact – will instead show up on a list sent to the Corps, triggering a process of further review and ultimately – if EPA does it’s job right – the rejection of some if not all of these proposed mountaintop removal projects under the Clean Water Act.

For better or worse, the forthcoming EPA list of environmentally risky projects will mark an important step closer to the establishment of clear, public standards for what level of environmental impact the agency will allow or prohibit at MTR sites proposed throughout Appalachia. The EPA has so far avoided establishing any such clear public standard.

With hundreds of mountaintop removal sites now in the balance, this is the moment of truth for the EPA, Administrator Lisa Jackson, and President Obama to make good on promises to reign in this clearly environmentally devastating practice.

As EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson explained on National Public Radio last week:

EPA has committed to reviewing [mountaintop removal mining] projects. It’s been a contentious issue from the start, certainly in Appalachia. We are in the process of reviewing about 84 permits right now that were put on hold by litigation. And in the next few weeks we’re going to have to make a determination under the Clean Water Act as to whether those permits can meet the Clean Water Act standards or whether they should be held up and potentially ultimately vetoed. EPA has the authority to veto the permits. The permits themselves are issued by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. So EPA plays sort of an oversight role there.

As we wait for the EPA’s decision on the dozens of pending MTR permits, the Agency moved forward on a seperate front to block the largest proposed mountaintop removal site in West Virginia history in letter sent to the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers late last week.

Read the full story at www.WattHead.org, the new home of WattHead – Energy News and Commentary

5 Responses to “A Moment of Truth for Appalachia, Obama and EPA on Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining”


  1. 1 Scott Sep 9th, 2009 at 8:10 pm

    FYI. The number of permits has already been reduced from 108 to 86.

  2. 2 Jesse Jenkins Sep 9th, 2009 at 8:15 pm

    I’ve seen 108, 86 and 84. Ken Ward had a list with 108 on it. Not sure which is current, so went with the highest number. Sorry for any confusion.

  3. 3 Scott Sep 9th, 2009 at 8:55 pm

    No worries, I got the number from the activists talking with the EPA.

  4. 4 andrewmunn Sep 9th, 2009 at 11:01 pm

    Great Post! It’s good to see some of Ken Ward Jr.’s prolific and informative work trickling onto IGHIH. And of course, the idea of all the public support behind ending MTR finally amounting to some tangible policy shifts is sweet. I’ll believe it when I see it, but will keep an extra eye out this week.

  5. 5 Alan Gregory Sep 10th, 2009 at 11:16 am

    Couldn’t find a general “submit comments” link, so am doing so here. Take a look at the photo accompanying this Norfolk, Va., newspaper article about coal being shipped to China. Then ask yourself how many tons of carbon dioxide are in the rail cars.
    http://www.dailypress.com/news/dp-local_coal_0910sep10,0,7004227.story

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About Jesse


Jesse Jenkins is an energy and climate policy analyst, advocate, and blogger. Jesse is the Director of Energy and Climate Policy at the Breakthrough Institute in Oakland, California, where he works to develop and advance new energy solutions to power America's future, secure our energy freedom, and halt global warming. He joined Breakthrough in June 2008 and previously directed the Breakthrough Generation fellowship program for young clean energy leaders. Jesse worked previously as a Research and Policy Associate at the Renewable Northwest Project in Portland, OR, helping to advance the development of the Pacific Northwest's abundant renewable energy potential. A prolific author and blogger on clean energy issues, Jesse is the founder and chief editor of WattHead - Energy News and Commentary, a featured writer and advisory board member at the Energy Collective, and a frequent contributor at Forbes.com, Huffington Post, and Grist.org.

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