Los Angeles Times

Bay Area city bans coal exports

Vote by lawmakers in Richmond adds to loss of ports for the fuel along the West Coast.

- BY WILL WADE

A crucial route for American coal exports to Asia is drying up after yet another U.S. port city passed a law to bar the fuel from leaving its shores.

Lawmakers in Richmond, Calif., voted Tuesday to impose a ban on coal, targeting a terminal that handles about a quarter of exports from the West Coast.

Richmond is joining other West Coast cities that have prohibited shipping the fossil fuel through their ports, choking off key routes to some of the only coal markets in the world still growing. As utilities burn less coal in the U.S., environmen­talists and lawmakers see the ordinances barring exports as a way to both limit pollution from coal dust locally and reduce greenhouse gases globally.

“I’ve got bigger ambitions than just Richmond,” Mayor Tom Butt said. “I’d like to get rid of coal worldwide.”

The Richmond ordinance targets a port run by Levin-Richmond Terminal Corp. In 2018, the facility shipped almost 1 million metric tons of coal to Japan and South Korea. The law gives the port three years to stop coal shipments.

Only a tiny portion of global coal trade is likely to be affected by the move. Exports from the U.S. accounted for just over 3% of the Asia-Pacific region’s total imports in 2018, with India and Japan the biggest buyers, according to the latest BP Statistica­l Review.

The data also showed most American cargoes headed to Europe.

Levin-Richmond Terminal’s chief executive, Gary Levin, has said the law would put him out of business and has threatened to sue.

Oakland passed a law in 2016 barring coal exports. A federal judge later overturned the law, and the city and environmen­tal groups have pursued the issue in an appeals court. In 2014, Oregon regulators denied a permit to a proposed coal export terminal on the Columbia River.

“Communitie­s are pushing back on toxic and polluting coal exports,” said Minda Berbeco, director of the San Francisco Bay Chapter of the Sierra Club. “No one wants to live with coal dust coating their homes and cars.”

Wade writes for Bloomberg.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? ACTIONS by West Coast cities are choking off key routes to some of the only coal markets in the world still growing. Above, the Port of Oakland in November.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images ACTIONS by West Coast cities are choking off key routes to some of the only coal markets in the world still growing. Above, the Port of Oakland in November.

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