More than 300 mine workers and their family members rallied outside the Environmental Protection Agency's headquarters in Washington on Tuesday "to protest a proposal to limit carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants that they said would kill jobs in Appalachia," Zack Colman reports for Washington Examiner. (Examiner photo by Graeme Jennings: Protestors on Tuesday at EPA headquarters)
The rules, proposed by the EPA and the Obama Administration, seek to cut carbon-dioxide emissions by 30 percent by 2030 from existing power plants based on emission levels from 2005, a move that protestors said will result in lost jobs in Appalachia, Colman writes. "Many of the protesters were reliable
Democratic voters who said they were venting frustration not with their
party, but rather with an Obama administration that they say is
pummeling their communities with too-stringent regulations."
Coal production in Central Appalachia "peaked in 1997 at 290 million
short tons," Colman writes. "It hit 133 million short tons last year, according to data
from the federal U.S. Energy Information Administration. EIA says
production will fall below 100 million short tons for good in 2023,
dropping to 80.5 million short tons in 2040." (Read more)
A digest of events, trends, issues, ideas and journalism from and about rural America, by the Institute for Rural Journalism, based at the University of Kentucky. Links may expire, require subscription or go behind pay walls. Please send news and knowledge you think would be useful to benjy.hamm@uky.edu.
Wednesday, October 08, 2014
Miners protest EPA; say Obama' s proposed clean air rules are costing Central Appalachia jobs
Labels:
air pollution,
Appalachia,
climate change,
coal,
electricity,
energy,
environment,
global warming,
jobs,
president,
renewable energy
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