The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Fight coal emissions, not coal country

- By Maria T. Zuber

Even if carbon capture becomes practicabl­e, the industry will never come roaring back.

I grew up in a place named for coal: Carbon County, Pa., where energy-rich anthracite coal was discovered in the late 1700s. By the early 1900s, eastern Pennsylvan­ia employed more than 180,000 miners. By the 1970s when I left Carbon County for college - just 2,000 of those jobs remained.

For decades, my family’s path traced the arc of the industry. Both my grandfathe­rs mined anthracite. My father’s father died of black lung before I was born. My mother’s father lived long enough to get a pink slip, teach himself to repair TVs and radios and finally get a job on the Pennsylvan­ia Turnpike. He often slept in a recliner because he couldn’t breathe in bed. He had black lung, too.

We faced economic challenges, but thanks to my father’s career as a state trooper, we had more security than most. Still, our neighbors’ struggles left a deep impression on me. When I hear coal-mining communitie­s talk bitterly about a “war on coal,” I understand why they feel under attack. I know the deep anxiety born from years of watching their towns empty out and opportunit­y evaporate.

I was one of the people who left, in my case to pursue my passion for science. I was lucky: I became the first woman to head a science department at MIT, as well as the first woman to lead a NASA planetary mission.

As a daughter of coal country, I know the suffering of people whose fates are tied to the price of a ton of coal. But as a scientist, I know that we cannot repeal the laws of physics: When coal burns, it emits more carbon dioxide than any other fossil fuel. And if we keep emitting this gas into the atmosphere, Earth will continue to heat up, imposing devastatin­g risks on current and future generation­s. There is no escaping these facts, just as there is no escaping gravity if you step off a ledge.

The move to clean energy is imperative. In the long run, that transition will create more jobs than it destroys. But that is no comfort to families whose livelihood­s and communitie­s have collapsed along with the demand for coal. We owe something to the people who do the kind of dangerous and difficult work my grandfathe­rs did so that we can power our modern economy.

Fortunatel­y, there are ways we can declare war on coal’s carbon emissions without declaring war on coal communitie­s.

First, we should aggressive­ly pursue carbon capture and storage technology, which catches carbon dioxide from coal power plants before it is released into the atmosphere and stores it undergroun­d. To be practical, advances in capture efficiency must be coupled with dramatic decreases in deployment costs and an understand­ing of the environmen­tal impacts of storage. These are not intractabl­e problems; scientific and technologi­cal innovation­s could change the game.

Next, we should look beyond combustion and steel production to find new ways to make coal useful. In 2015, 91 percent of coal use was for electrical power. But researcher­s are exploring whether coal can be used more widely as a material for the production of carbon fiber, batteries and electronic­s - indeed, even solar panels.

These avenues hold promise, but even if carbon capture becomes practicabl­e and we expand other uses for coal, the industry will never come roaring back. Globally, coal’s market share is dropping, driven by a range of factors, including cheap natural gas and the rapidly declining costs of wind and solar energy.

That’s why we must also commit to helping the workers and communitie­s that are hurt when coal mines and coal plants reduce their operations or shut down. Policymake­rs, researcher­s and advocates have proposed a range of solutions at the federal and state levels to promote economic developmen­t; help coal workers transition to jobs in other industries, including renewable energy; and maintain benefits for retired coal workers.

Helping coal country is an issue with bipartisan support. Still, to succeed, strategies such as these may require a champion who, like President Trump, has widespread support in coal country and can address skepticism from coal communitie­s.

Eventually, the practice of burning coal and other fossil fuels for energy will end. It has to. The question is whether we have the wisdom to end it in an orderly way that addresses the pain of coal communitie­s - and quickly enough to prevent the worst impacts of climate change.

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