The Jerusalem Post

US Interior Dept finalizes rule to protect waterways from coal mining

- • By VALERIE VOLCOVICI

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US Interior Department on Monday finalized a contentiou­s rule to protect streams and forests from the impact of coal mining, one of the Obama administra­tion’s last major environmen­tal regulation­s that the incoming Trump administra­tion is likely to target.

The Stream Protection Rule, which the coal industry strongly opposes, updates 33-yearold regulation­s with stronger requiremen­ts for responsibl­e surface coal mining.

The Interior Department says the rule will protect 9,656 kilometers of streams and 21,043 hectares of forests over the next two decades.

“This updated, scientific­ally modern rule will make life better for a countless number of Americans who live near places where coal is being mined,” said Joseph Pizarchik, director of the Interior Department’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamatio­n and Enforcemen­t, which crafted the rule.

Pizarchik said his office received over 150,000 public comments on the proposal.

The Stream Protection Rule requires companies to avoid mining practices that could pollute streams and drinking water sources, restore streams, and promise to return mined areas to their original form.

It also requires mining companies to replant these areas with native trees and vegetation in certain cases.

The rule also requires testing and monitoring of streams near coal mines before, during and after drilling to ensure that miners can detect increased levels of pollution.

Industry groups like the National Mining Associatio­n have been vocal opponents of the proposal, saying it places too much of a burden on mining companies.

The rule is likely to be reversed by President-elect Donald Trump, who said that in his early days in office he would reverse a number of regulation­s targeting the coal industry, which he has promised to revive.

The Republican-majority Congress could use the Congressio­nal Review Act to block the rule with a simple majority vote. Trump would likely not veto it.

Republican Senator Shelley Moore Capito, who represents coal-mining state West Virginia, called the Stream Protection Rule a “last-ditch effort” by the Obama administra­tion to burden her state’s struggling coal industry.

“The decision by voters last month makes today’s announceme­nt by the Office of Surface Mining an exercise in futility,” Capito said. “Working with President-elect Trump and our Republican congressio­nal majority, I am confident that we will be able to use the Congressio­nal Review Act to stop this rule from taking effect.”

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