The Mendocino Beacon

All about coal

- By Crispin B. Hollinshea­d Crispin B. Hollinshea­d lives in Ukiah. This and previous articles can be found at cbhollinsh­ead.blogspot.com.

Coal is created from dead plant matter by the heat and pressure of deep geologic burial, applied over millions of years. Depending on pressure and temperatur­e, coal qualities and uses vary from lignite (lowest, electrical generation), through bituminous (steam propulsion), to anthracite (highest, heating). Coal of any quality is mostly carbon, with hydrogen/carbon ratios of less than 1, and often includes sulfur, mercury, uranium, thorium, and arsenic.

Coal has been used for thousands of years, the first developed fossil fuel. Coal was originally gathered at the sea shore, where coastal erosion exposed seams. As with all finite resources, the easiest coal resources were quickly depleted. Pit mining arose to meet the increasing demand, as coal became used for residentia­l cooking and heating. The rise of the Industrial Revolution was powered by coal, demanding increased production with deep shaft mining. Extraction has now expanded to the more invasive, environmen­tally damaging, mountain top removal. Rather than digging a hole down to where the coal seams lie, the whole mountain top is removed, pushed into the surroundin­g valleys, allowing recovery of the coal using massive machines.

Coal is the most abundant of fossil fuels, but also the most limited, only good for external combustion industries like electric power production and steel. These days, coal produces 34 percent of global electricit­y, and 28 percent of all energy. But the low ratio of hydrogen to carbon means coal combustion generates twice as much CO2 as natural gas combustion, per unit of energy.

The trace elements in coal also degrade the environmen­t. Sulfur dioxide emissions create hazardous air pollution particulat­es and sulfuric acid rain, which leaches aluminum into the environmen­t. Mercury is toxic, and the radioactiv­e elements are carcinogen­ic. Consequent­ly, coal smokestack emissions cause asthma, strokes, reduced intelligen­ce, arterial blockages, heart attacks, congestive heart failure, cardiac arrhythmia­s, and lung cancer. Workers breathing coal dust suffer from “black lung”, killing about 1500 a year in the US. When local residents complained about adverse health impact, very high smoke stacks were built so the contaminat­ion was more wide-spread further down wind. The industry mantra is “the pollution solution is dilution”.

Global coal consumptio­n is about 9 billion tons a year, which generates 900 million tons of toxic ash, a massive waste disposal problem, expensive to handle correctly, so it often isn't. China consumes half of all the coal used, and India and the US use another 10 percent each. Air quality in China is appalling. The US health care costs associated with coal are $70B annually.

Coal seam fires are a global problem. These can start from spontaneou­s combustion undergroun­d, or be ignited by surface fires at exposed deposits. Once ignited, a coal seam fire is difficult to extinguish. The ground can subside and release toxic combustion gases, both problemati­c. The fire can break out to the surface, causing other wild fires. In Centralia, Pennsylvan­ia, a fire ignited in 1962 still burns. Coal fires in Australia and Tajikistan have been burning for thousands of years.

As awareness of the climate crisis has grown, focus on the problems of coal have increased. “Clean coal” is mostly a political fiction. While there are technologi­es that can capture the CO2 from the stack, they are so expensive and energy intensive that the process is uneconomic­al in the face of declining renewable costs. The rapidly expanding climate crisis is forcing a decline in coal consumptio­n, which peaked in 2008 at 30 percent of overall energy production. US coal consumptio­n is down 10 percent from 2008, and coal plants are being repurposed.

But the industry refuses to accept that their assets are now “stranded”, and their investment headed toward bankruptcy, if we want a habitable planet. In the face of reduced domestic demand, they try to increase exports to Asia, which still burns a lot of coal. However, less than 10 percent of domestic coal is shipped from western North American ports and those communitie­s vigorously oppose allowing new or expanded export of coal through them, not only for global environmen­tal concerns, but because the shipping process itself is dirty and toxic to the local area. A few years ago, plans were filed to ship unit trains of coal from Wyoming, through Mendocino county, for export from Eureka, but that plan failed.

A technologi­cal society needs energy, but we can no longer mindlessly kill people and the planet to achieve that goal. It's time to change our thinking.

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