coal mob stylee
The senator from West Virginia is bought and paid for by Big Coal. With his help the dying industry is pulling one final heist and the entire planet may pay the price
Humanity should have phased out coal yesterday, climate scientist Peter Kalmus tells me. Burning fossil fuels is whats driving the crazy heat waves, flooding, and ecosystem deaths were now experiencing, and which are rapidly intensifying. And coal is the worst of the worst in terms of carbon-emissions intensity.
But coal was not phased out yesterday. Globally, 40 percent of electricity comes from burning coal, creating 30 percent of global carbon emissions. The biggest coal burner is China, which consumes more coal than the rest of the world combined. Here in the U.S., coal is gradually being displaced by cheap natural gas, wind, and solar. But there are still 179 active coal plants in the U.S., generating 20 percent of U.S. electricity. Virtually the entire states of West Virginia and Wyoming are powered by coal.
In the long run, coal is roadkill to technological progress. The problem is that it isnt dying fast enough. No scenario for stabilizing warming below truly dangerous levels allows for substantial additional extraction and burning of coal, says Penn State climate scientist Michael Mann, author of The New Climate War. Even the conservative International Energy Agency has said that there can be no new fossil-fuel infrastructure (especially coal) if we are to keep warming under 1.5 C/3 F, a level beyond which we commit to some of the worst impacts of climate change.
There are lots of reasons why coal has proved to be so hard to get rid of. Part of it has to do with the sheer scale of coal-industry infrastructure the mines, the railroads, the power plants. Part of it has to do with the cultural bias that real men burn rocks for power. Part of it has to do with dark money and political influence. And part of it has to do with us, the energy consumers who dont know where our power comes from and dont really care.