Pollution From Mining Activities
How serious is the pollution that results from mining activities? How clean are the coal mining activities in Kentucky, West Virginia, and other Appalachian areas where mountaintops are stripped away to get at the coal? What other mining activities cause pollution of the air, the land, and the waterways? This paper will delve into those mining activities and report the pollution that results from those strategies.
The Pollution from Mountaintop Removal Strategies
An article in National Geographic (Mitchell, 2006) points to the fact that miles of rivers and streams are simply filled in, drowned in dirt, coal waste, and rocks. And Mitchell discusses the pollution that results when the coal is mined and the waste and other chemical residues are dumped in ponds. Hundreds of billions gallons of "toxic black water and sticky black goo," which are byproducts of mountaintop mining, are dumped into "slurry ponds, sludge lagoons, or waste basins," Mitchell writes on page 2.
In the winter of 1972, Mitchell recalls, two days of "torrential rain" caused a coal-waste structure in Logan County West Virginia to collapse. Folks downhill from the structure were devastated when 130 million gallons of the toxic black material "spilled into Buffalo Creek," Mitchell recalls. The flood of nasty coal waste products simply swept up "scores of homes as it swept downstream," and it resulted in 125 deaths. This is an example of how pollution actually kills people, and the mountaintop mining strategy is to blame for enormous destruction of the land and pollution of the rivers and streams.
An article in Science Daily points to the fact that mountaintop mining produces selenium pollution and that causes "permanent damage to the environment" as well as posing serious risks to human health. Dennis Lemly, a biology research professor, says "We're killing fish right now with selenium pollution from mountaintop mining." And while mountaintop mining pushes "excess rock to the neighboring valley… [and has] buried more than 1,000 miles of streams," the selenium that is produced in the cleaning portion of mountaintop mining is killing fish and causing fish that do survive to be "deformed" with "crooked spines and deformed heads" (Science Daily, 2010).
When oil companies use "strip mining" to go after "tar sands oil" as they do in the Boreal Forest in Alberta, Canada, they "triple the amount of global warming pollution" from the process of extracting that oil (Natural Resources Defense Council - NRDC). Water used in the mining process in the Boreal Forest, in fact the NRDC explains that "four barrels of water are drained from the Athabasca River to produce one barrel of tar sands oil" (NRDC). And those four barrels of water are not returned to the river but instead they wind up "…as toxic slurry dumped in holding lagoons so big they can be seen from space by the naked eye" (NRDC).
The NRDC issued a press release in April, 2010, announcing that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced new policies to "strengthen permit requirements under the Clean Water Act." Studies verify that the burial of headwater streams by waste from mountaintop mining "causes permanent loss of ecosystems" through the pollution created by mining. "Mountaintop mining has polluted or obliterated nearly 2,000 miles of streams throughout Appalachia," the NRDC explains. For each ton of coal that is extracted from the mountaintop procedures "…another 20 to 25 tons of mining waste is disposed of in so-called valley fills" (NRDC).
A New York Times' article (Reis, 2010) referred to proposals within the Interior Department that would set stricter standards for mountaintop coal mining activities. Previously, under the Bush Administration, states were allowed to "set their own standards" to avoid "material damage to watersheds." The problem was that "material damage" was never truly defined in a clear way, so streams and rivers were polluted because coal-mining companies made up their own rules. The "waste rock" left over after the mountaintop has been removed is "dumped in valleys," polluting streams and filling. New rules would reportedly require the mining companies to stay 100 feet away from streams with their waste rock and slurry (Reis).
The Safe Drinking Water Foundation (SDWF) in Canada points out that when large quantities of rock that contains sulfide minerals are extracted from an open pit -- or opened up in an underground mine -- the sulfide "reacts with water and oxygen to produce sulphuric acid." What happens next is the water reaches a certain level of acidity, bacteria called "Thiobacillus...
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