December 10, 2008
Wind-power benefits would outpace coal, study suggests
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A wind-power production facility along the ridges of Coal River Mountain would provide more jobs and tax revenue than a mountaintop removal operation planned by Massey Energy, according to a new economic impact report released Tuesday. Read the report

Strip-mining the area will do more harm than good for local communities, if environmental damage and health effects are taken into account, according to the report prepared for the group Coal River Mountain Watch.

Mining the area could produce nearly 200 direct jobs and several hundred more spinoff positions. But those jobs would disappear when the coal is mined out in about 17 years, according to the report prepared by Downstream Strategies, a Morgantown-based environmental consulting firm.

Construction of a windmill operation would generate more than 275 temporary construction jobs, but then create 40 direct and more than 30 indirect jobs that could essentially last indefinitely, according to the report.

"After this construction phase, mountaintop removal jobs will surpass local industry wind scenario jobs for a short time," the report concludes. "Then, only eight years after the mountaintop removal mines close and in all successive years, the cumulative number of wind-related jobs will exceed mountaintop removal jobs."

Downstream Strategies President Evan Hansen and other study authors compared the "cumulative jobs" from the competing proposals. Each year that a job exists, it counts as one "cumulative job." So 10 jobs that exist for 10 years amount to 100 "cumulative jobs."

In the case of the wind project, the proposal would create far more "cumulative jobs" over a long period. Going out 100 years, the windmill operation would generate 28 percent more "cumulative jobs" than the mountaintop removal proposal, the new report found.

And if a local industry could sprout to build wind turbines, towers and blades, it would surpass the mining operation's "cumulative job" creation by 2033. By 2113, the wind industry could create three times more "cumulative jobs" than the mountaintop removal mine, the study found.

"This report confirms what we've been saying all along: That developing a wind farm on Coal River Mountain is the best way to diversify the local economy," said Lorelei Scarbro, a resident and community organizer for the wind campaign.

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Posted By: One Citizen (7:12am 12-13-2008)
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Rory forgot to mention that they can still deep mine the coal instead of ripping out all our other natural resources.

BTW, wonderment, what'll folks like you do once all the coal is gone and your beloved strip mining method has polluted all our drinking water, turned our mountains into to a moonscape and screwed the air up so badly your kid all have emphysema? Don Blankenship will be rich enough that he can move to Monte Carlo and take his handpuppet judges with him.

Posted By: Rory McIlmoil (5:07pm 12-11-2008)
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To wonderer (second installment, please see the first):

There are also only 4500 MTR workers in southern WV. Massey produces about 50 million tons of coal a year, about 20 million of which comes from MTR. About 48 million total tons of coal was produced by MTR last year, or about 30% of total WV coal production. This means that Massey, at most, employs about 1,800 workers on its MTR operations.

Now, if you take the time to read the Coal River Mtn Wind vs. MTR economic study available on our website, www.coalriverwind.org, you'll find that the development of a local wind industry, including a turbine manufacturing plant, would create 1,750 direct jobs related to the manufacture of wind turbines. That's nearly as many jobs as Massey employs with MTR, and that's the result of constructing only a single turbine manufacturing plant. If WV developed wind in southern WV, imagine how many plants would be built, and how many jobs created?

How many mountains and people would be saved?

Posted By: Rory McIlmoil (3:49pm 12-11-2008)
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To wonderer (second installment, please see the first):

There are also only 4500 MTR workers in southern WV. Massey produces about 50 million tons of coal a year, about 20 million of which comes from MTR. About 48 million total tons of coal was produced by MTR last year, or about 30% of total WV coal production. This means that Massey, at most, employs about 1,800 workers on its MTR operations.

Now, if you take the time to read the Coal River Mtn Wind vs. MTR economic study available on our website, www.coalriverwind.org, you'll find that the development of a local wind industry, including a turbine manufacturing plant, would create 1,750 direct jobs related to the manufacture of wind turbines. That's nearly as many jobs as Massey employs with MTR, and that's the result of constructing only a single turbine manufacturing plant. If WV developed wind in southern WV, imagine how many plants would be built, and how many jobs created?

How many mountains and people would be saved?

Posted By: Rory McIlmoil (3:41pm 12-11-2008)
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To wonderer:

You should be proud to have a great family and to live a life without want. However, the money that pays for your house and car was made by destroying the homes and damaging the lives of others. I dont say that to be cruel, only to point out the truth.

MTR has led to the heavy contamination of the drinking/bathing/cooking water resources of hundreds to thousands of families in WV alone. Just ask the folks in Rawl how they feel about Massey MTR operations. These people were poisoned by Massey, and they are dying because of it. They have no other access to water and Massey proceeds with what they do without remorse, and that is both sad and scary, and you - the wife of a Massey strip-miner - must at least acknowledge and accept the truth of that. That truth is lived by thousands of others every day, and if you'd like, I will personally introduce you to some of those people.

To be continued in the next comment...

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In West Virginia, mining companies are literally moving mountains to uncover valuable, low sulfur coal reserves. Mountaintop removal has become the dominant form of surface mining in the state. Coal operators are blasting off hilltops, and dumping leftover rock and dirt into nearby valleys. An untold amount of the state has been flattened, and hundreds of miles of streams have been buried. Find out more in this Special Report.
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