SourceWatch needs your financial support to survive and thrive. If you've found this information on the people, organizations, and issues shaping the public agenda helpful, please make a tax-deductible donation now.

Portal:Coal Issues

From SourceWatch

Jump to: navigation, search
edit  

Coal Issues Portal


This article is part of the Coal Issues portal on SourceWatch, a project of CoalSwarm and the Center for Media and Democracy.

Welcome!

Welcome to CoalSwarm, the shared information tool on issues such as coal plants, mines, companies, environmental impacts, clean alternatives, regulation, grassroots organizing, industry lobbying, and much more. Articles include:

us map Washington Oregon Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii Alaska Alaska California Nevada Idaho Montana Wyoming Utah Arizona Colorado New_Mexico North_Dakota South_Dakota Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma Texas Minnesota Iowa Missouri Arkansas Louisiana Mississippi Alabama Tennessee Kentucky Illinois Wisconsin Michigan Michigan Indiana Ohio Florida Georgia West_Virginia Virginia South_Carolina North_Carolina Pennsylvania Maryland Maryland Delaware Delaware New_Jersey New_Jersey New_York Connecticut Connecticut Rhode_Island Rhode_Island Massachusetts Massachusetts Vermont Vermont New_Hampshire New_Hampshire Maine DC


Anyone can add to the resources provided here: videos of actions, sample testimony, the latest on particular coal plant proposals, information on alternatives to coal, news of upcoming events, and much more.

edit  

General information

edit  

Coal plants

In the spring of 2007, the U.S. Department of Energy reported that 151 coal plants were under development. Since that report, scores of proposals have been tabled, but new proposals have appeared.
edit  

Coal mines

edit  

Citizen activism on coal

edit  

Coal-related companies, agencies, and lobbying groups

Coal lobby

Coal project financing and construction

Electric Power

Coal mining

Synfuels

Transportation

edit  

Coal and power industry data

edit  

Carbon capture and storage

edit  

Synthetic fuels

edit  

The problem with coal

James Hansen testifies to the U.S. Congress
There is no longer any doubt that global warming is underway, but the situation is not hopeless. The good news is that scientists have proposed a way to avoid the worst outcomes: phase out coal. In fact, since coal reserves are far more massive than those of other fossil fuels, James Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Space Institute, has said that ending emissions from coal "is 80% of the solution to the global warming crisis." Fortunately, economical alternatives to coal are now at hand, and around the world, over 350 citizen groups are working to promote a transition away from coal. The mission of CoalSwarm is to assist this movement by building a constantly expanding body of information that everyone in the movement can use.

Read more...

edit  

Politics and coal

edit  

Coal-related environmental issues

edit  

Alternatives to coal

edit  

Coal economics and subsidies

edit  

Quotes

"CoalSwarm is a great example of a loose community united by a common cause developing a shared resource to do their collective work better."[1] --Advocacy 2.0

For the more academic activist, look to CoalSwarm, the one-stop-shop wiki for all the dirt you need on coal. Coal Swarm is an effort to create transparent, group-source information about the coal industry: tracking plant announcements, political maneuvers, lawsuits and more. As one supporter explained: “It’s putting information once the province of lobbyists into local activist’s hands.”[2] --SolveClimate

"What began as a few local ripples of resistance to coal-fired power is quickly evolving into a national tidal wave of grassroots opposition from environmental, health, farm, and community organizations and a fast-growing number of state governments. The public at large is turning against coal."[3] --Lester Brown, President, Earth Policy Institute

"In a few years, the backlash against coal power in America has become the country's biggest-ever environmental campaign, transforming the nation's awareness of climate change and inspiring political leaders to take firmer action after years of doubt and delay. Plants have been defeated in at least 30 of the 50 states, uniting those with already strong environmental records, such as California, with more conservative areas, such as the southern and central states."[4] --Manchester Guardian

  1. "Coal Swarm," Advocacy 2.0, accessed June 2008
  2. Rachel Barge, "Media Savvy Youth are Blogging Coal to Death," SolveClimate, March 31, 2009
  3. Lester Brown, "U.S. Moving Toward Ban on New Coal-Fired Power Plants," Earth Policy Institute, February 14, 2008
  4. Juliette Jowit, "Coal plans go up in smoke," Manchester Guardian, September 3, 2008


Purge server cache

Personal tools

Be a SourceWatcher!

Enter your e-mail address to get the Center for Media and Democracy's free weekly e-newsletter.