Difference between revisions of "Murray Energy Corporation"

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==CEO Murray, 2010 election donations, and climate denial==
 
==CEO Murray, 2010 election donations, and climate denial==
In February 2010, as California Watch reported, Murray Energy’s political committee and executives, including CEO [[Robert Murray]], combined to contribute nearly $25,000 to California GOP Senate candidate [[Carly Fiorina]]’s campaign against [[Barbara Boxer]], the incumbent Democrat. (At the same Ohio fundraiser, Fiorina obtained an additional $39,000 from Midwestern companies that sell coal mining equipment and supplies.)<ref name=lw>Lance Williams, [http://californiawatch.org/watchblog/1-ohio-coal-company-donated-fiorina-also-gave-prop-23 "Ohio coal company that backed Fiorina also gave to Prop. 23"] CA Watch Blog, July 27, 2010.</ref>
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In February 2010, Murray Energy’s political committee and executives, including CEO [[Robert Murray]], combined to contribute nearly $25,000 to California GOP Senate candidate [[Carly Fiorina]]’s campaign against [[Barbara Boxer]], the incumbent Democrat. (At the same Ohio fundraiser, Fiorina obtained an additional $39,000 from Midwestern companies that sell coal mining equipment and supplies.)<ref name=lw>Lance Williams, [http://californiawatch.org/watchblog/1-ohio-coal-company-donated-fiorina-also-gave-prop-23 "Ohio coal company that backed Fiorina also gave to Prop. 23"] CA Watch Blog, July 27, 2010.</ref>
  
 
In May 2010, Murray Energy donated $30,000 to California’s [[Suspend AB 32 (2010)|Proposition 23]], which would suspend the state’s [[AB 32]] anti-global warming measure until the state economy rebounds from the recession. Another donor, the [[American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity]], a Washington, D.C.-[[lobbying]] group, gave $5,000. Prop. 23 is sponsored by the energy industry, and its biggest booster is the [[Valero Energy]] from San Antonio, Texas.<ref name=lw/>
 
In May 2010, Murray Energy donated $30,000 to California’s [[Suspend AB 32 (2010)|Proposition 23]], which would suspend the state’s [[AB 32]] anti-global warming measure until the state economy rebounds from the recession. Another donor, the [[American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity]], a Washington, D.C.-[[lobbying]] group, gave $5,000. Prop. 23 is sponsored by the energy industry, and its biggest booster is the [[Valero Energy]] from San Antonio, Texas.<ref name=lw/>

Revision as of 14:39, 8 November 2010

{{#Badges: CoalSwarm}}The Murray Energy Corporation is a coal mining company producing produces approximately 30 million tons of high quality bituminous coal per year. It has operations in southern Ohio, in southwestern Pennsylvania, the Illinois Basin (Western Kentucky and Southern Illinois), and central Utah.[1]

Coal slurry spills

In October 2010, water contaminated with coal dust "spilled" for the fourth time since 2000 into a Belmont County creek that is home to an endangered salamander, Ohio state agencies reported. The coal slurry - water used to wash newly mined coal and filled with potentially toxic heavy metals - came from a pipeline that runs from Murray Energy's Century Mine across Captina Creek to the company's Ohio Valley coal waste slurry impoundment, said Mike Shelton, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. The break occurred in a joint in the pipeline about 250 feet north of the creek in a hayfield, Shelton said, spilling slurry into the field and the creek.[2]

The Ohio Environmental Council (OEC) estimates the spill at about one quarter of a million gallons. According to the OEC, 7 leaks were found in Murray Energy's impoundment pond and two were in the pipeline, one in 2005 and then this 2010 spill. The 2005 pipeline spill cost Murray Energy $50,000 dollars in fines for killing thousands of fish and polluting a half mile of the same creek. In this spill, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Division Spokesman Mike Shelton said, "so far 3500 fish and 850 other salamander, crayfish and frogs died in the creek."[3]

"The question is why does this keep happening, why does this company seem unwilling to change the way it does business?" said Nachy Kanfer, Spokesman for the Sierra Club, referring to Murray Energy's practice of pumping slurry through a pipeline only to be stored in a slurry pond indefinitely. Murray Energy was denied a permit to build a new slurry pond in 2008 by the Ohio EPA, now they have applied again for another permit to build a pond.[3]

CEO Murray, 2010 election donations, and climate denial

In February 2010, Murray Energy’s political committee and executives, including CEO Robert Murray, combined to contribute nearly $25,000 to California GOP Senate candidate Carly Fiorina’s campaign against Barbara Boxer, the incumbent Democrat. (At the same Ohio fundraiser, Fiorina obtained an additional $39,000 from Midwestern companies that sell coal mining equipment and supplies.)[4]

In May 2010, Murray Energy donated $30,000 to California’s Proposition 23, which would suspend the state’s AB 32 anti-global warming measure until the state economy rebounds from the recession. Another donor, the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, a Washington, D.C.-lobbying group, gave $5,000. Prop. 23 is sponsored by the energy industry, and its biggest booster is the Valero Energy from San Antonio, Texas.[4]

It is assumed that the company targeted Boxer and the anti-AB 32 proposition because of CEO Murray, who has dismissed global warming as “hysterical global goofiness." Murray and Boxer went head-to-head over the issue at a 2007 Senate hearing on environment and public works. Former Vice President Al Gore and "Silent Spring" author Rachel Carson were also criticized by Murray, who said: "The hysterical and out-of-control climate change or global warming issue, and the legislation that you have proposed, will lead to the deterioration of the American standard of living and the accelerated exportation of more of our jobs to China and other developing countries, which have repeatedly advised, as recent as last week, that they will not limit their carbon dioxide emissions.... Albert Gore touts that his role model has always been Rachel Carson, with her picture on his wall, who led the environmental movement to ban DDT. She and her environmental followers killed millions of human beings around the world with the ban on DDT, which has since been found by the World Health Organization to be very safe to humans in controlling global epidemics."[4]

Existing Coal Mines

Contact details

Murray Energy Corporation
29325 Chagrin Boulevard
Suite 300
Pepper Pike, Ohio 44122
P: 216.765.1240
Email: info AT coalsource.com
Website: http://www.murrayenergy.net/

Articles and resources

Related SourceWatch articles

References

  1. Murray Energy Corporation, "History", Murray Energy Corporation website, accessed June 2009.
  2. Doug Caruso, "Coal slurry spill threatens Belmont County creek" The Columbus Dispatch, Oct. 1, 2010.
  3. Jump up to: 3.0 3.1 Rick Reitzel, "Ohio Coal Company Has A Large Coal Slurry Spill" NBC, Oct. 6, 2010.
  4. Jump up to: 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lance Williams, "Ohio coal company that backed Fiorina also gave to Prop. 23" CA Watch Blog, July 27, 2010.

External resources

external articles

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