EXTERNALITIES: Coal isn’t cheaper: David Frum ignores the negative externalities associated with burning coal

Image: The impacts of coal utilization. Illustration by Alan Morin via “Cradle to Grave: The Environmental Impacts from Coal.”

Recently, on HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher (episode 183 that aired on May 7, 2010), David Frum claimed that “the cost of electricity from non-coal sources, is much, much greater than the cost of electricity from coal.” Bill Maher missed an important opportunity to correct Frum.

First, Frum ignored the externalities associated with burning coal for electricity, and if merely considering the price paid for electricity, he also ignored the fact that renewable energy will become competitive with energy derived from coal and other fossil-fuel sources (but if considering externalities associated with burning coal—a dirty energy source—renewable energy is much much cheaper than coal). Furthermore, coal, like other fossil fuels, is subsidized (i.e., governments and society pick up the tab for the environmental and health consequences associated with burning coal). To illustrate the externalities associated with burning coal, I recently investigated whether coal can be clean:

When coal is burned, dozens of hazardous or toxic substances52 in addition to “trapped” carbon dioxide53—a greenhouse gas pollutant—are released.54 Consequently, some of these substances released through coal combustion, such as mercury, disseminate by means of deposition throughout the landscape and into aquatic environments.55 The hazardous substances not released directly into the atmosphere are present in combustion wastes such as fly ash.56 The coal combustion wastes released into the atmosphere are a public health hazard, and the corresponding healthcare costs are passed off to the consumer and government entities. In fact, states are seeking to abate combustion from some coal-fired power plants over economic, environmental, and public health concerns.57 Although the negative health impacts of burning coal may be not be readily recognized, healthcare costs have been estimated to be in the billions.58 For example, “the National Research Council has estimated the external costs associated with emissions of nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and PM from coal-fired power plants in the U.S. at $62 billion in 2005.”59 Another study released in 2010 found that “filthy air in California cost federal, state and private health insurers $193 million in hospital costs.”60 That same study determined that “Medicare and MediCal, California’s Medicaid program, paid for more than two-thirds of the costs, while private insurers paid the rest.”61 Granted, coal-fired power plants are not the sole contributor of air pollution, but they are a significant producer of air pollution.62 In fact, coal-fired power plants are significant contributors of carbon dioxide, mercury emissions, nitrogen oxide emissions, ozone pollution or smog, and particulate matter pollution.63 Furthermore, an EPA study found that “coal plants were found to release 67 different air toxics, many of which are known or probable human carcinogens and neurotoxins that can harm brain development and irritate the respiratory system.”64

Mercury, in particular, negatively impacts the health of ecosystems and the health of humans. The EPA has estimated “that about one third of U.S. [anthropogenic mercury] emissions are deposited within the contiguous U.S. and the remainder enters the global cycle.”65 Mercury emissions are problematic, because there is a connection between blood mercury levels and intellectual performance, and the costs to society over “lifelong diminution in intelligence” has been estimated to be $8.7 billion per year.66 As a result, mercury is recognized as posing a public health threat,67 since mercury is a neurotoxin.68 The most dangerous form of mercury is the organic form of mercury or methylmercury,69 which is produced by microbial activity in aquatic environments.70 Methylmercury is the most dangerous form of mercury, because it is easily absorbed by the human body.71 Furthermore, methylmercury is a bioaccumulative environmental toxicant,72 and as a result, undergoes biomagnification within food chains.73 As a result, seafood consumption is directly related to methylmercury intake by humans.74 In fact, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the EPA advise “women who may become pregnant, pregnant women, nursing mothers, and young children to avoid some types of fish and eat fish and shellfish that are lower in mercury.”75 Despite warnings, according to the EPA, “it is estimated that more than 300,000 newborns each year may have increased risk of learning disabilities associated with in utero exposure to methylmercury.”76

.       .       .

52Alan H. Lockwood et al., Coal’s Assault on Human Health, (2009), available at http://www.psr.org/assets/pdfs/psr-coal-fullreport.pdf (Discussing that “coal combustion releases sulfur dioxide, particulate matter (Pm), nitrogen oxides, mercury, and dozens of other substances known to be hazardous to human health.”).

53The problem is that the burning fossil fuels, such as coal, results in a release of carbon dioxide that has been trapped for millions of years. As a result, burning coal contributes an increase in concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide over time. This additional carbon dioxide is problematic due to carbon dioxide’s warming effect. For this reason, carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. See The Carbon Dioxide Greenhouse Effect, http://www.aip.org/history/climate/co2.htm (last visited February 17, 2010).

54See American Institute of Physics, The Carbon Dioxide Greenhouse Effect, http://www.aip.org/history/climate/co2.htm (last visited March 1, 2010).

55See U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Environmental Effects of Mercury, http://www.epa.gov/hg/eco.htm (last visited February 27, 2010).

56See Tim Lucas, Toxic Coal Ash Threatens Health And Environment, Duke University, Aug. 18, 2009, http://news.duke.edu/2009/08/toxiccoal.html (Discussing how hazardous elements remain in fly ash and how toxic ash can leave storage ponds or spill sites by becoming “re-suspended in the air as dust [upon drying] and could have a severe health impact on local residents or workers who inhale them”).

57See North Carolina ex rel. Cooper v. Tennessee Valley Authority, 515 F.3d 344 (4th Cir. 2008) (Due to impacts to human health and environmental quality, the State of North Carolina brought a public nuisance action against Tennessee Valley Authority seeking an injunction prohibiting it from operating its plants in a harmful manner.).

58For the FY 2008, EPA estimates that its 10 largest civil enforcement actions against stationary source Clean Air Act violations of emissions of sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter resulted in annual health benefits valued at $35 billion. According to the EPA, some of these health benefits translated into thousands of avoided premature deaths, fewer emergency room visits, fewer cases of chronic and acute bronchitis, fewer nonfatal heart attacks, fewer cases of respiratory problems, and a reduction of days of people missing school or work. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA FY2008 Enforcement & Compliance Annual Results (2008), available at http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/reports/endofyear/eoy2008/fy2008results.pdf.

59Alan H. Lockwood et al., Coal’s Assault on Human Health 10, (2009), available at http://www.psr.org/assets/pdfs/psr-coal-fullreport.pdf.

60Kristina Shevory, Health Costs of California Air Pollution, New York Times, March 12, 2010, http://greeninc.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/12/health-costs-of-california-air-pollution.

61Id.

62See Physicians for Social Responsibility, Coal-Fired Power Plants: Understanding the Health Costs of a Dirty Energy Source, available at http://action.psr.org/site/DocServer/Coal_Power_Fact_Sheet.pdf?docID=2821.

63Id.

64Id.

65U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Human Exposure to Mercury, http://www.epa.gov/hg/exposure.htm (last visited February 27, 2010).

66Physicians for Social Responsibility, Coal’s Effects on the Nervous System 32, available at http://www.psr.org/assets/pdfs/coals-assault-chapter-5.pdf.

67See U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Former Mercury Mine Above Cottage Grove Reservoir Proposed for Federal Cleanup List, http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/d0cf6618525a9efb85257359003fb69d/d76a7f9d4c5368448525763a007f0099!OpenDocument (last visited February 27, 2010).

68U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Human Health and Mercury, http://www.epa.gov/hg/health.htm (last visited February 27, 2010).

69See U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Health Effects and Mercury, http://www.epa.gov/hg/effects.htm (last visited February 27, 2010).

70U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Environmental Effects, http://www.epa.gov/hg/eco.htm (last visited on March 22, 2010).

71Laura Griesbauer, Methylmercury Contamination in Fish and Shellfish, http://www.csa.com/discoveryguides/mercury/review.pdf (last visited April 13, 2010).

72Wikipedia, Methylmercury, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methylmercury (last visited on March 22, 2010).

73Frances Solomon, Impacts of Metals on Aquatic Ecosystems and Human Health (2008), available at http://www.infomine.com/publications/docs/Mining.com/Apr2008c.pdf.

74See Raquel Rutledge, Mercury in sushi can hit risky levels, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Jan. 11, 2008, http://www.jsonline.com/news/29548599.html (“But while sushi is packed with protein and essential omega-3 fatty acids, some types are also tainted with methyl mercury, a dangerous neurotoxin that causes brain damage in babies and other problems for adults who ingest too much. . . . Tests showed the two pieces of tuna had potentially dangerous, and nearly illegal, levels of mercury. Most of the other samples, such as shrimp, salmon and mackerel, contained only trace amounts.”).

75U.S. Food and Drug Admin., Seafood, http://www.fda.gov/food/foodsafety/product-specificinformation/seafood/ (last visited on March 22, 2010).

76U.S. Envtl Prot. Agency, Human Exposure to Mercury, http://www.epa.gov/hg/exposure.htm (last visited on March 22, 2010).

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POLLUTION: Sparking the Pollution Blaze – Do we Really Need Fireworks?

NOTE: This post was written by Holly McCarthy, contributor to the Conservation Report

fireworksIf you think that burning a wad of $100 bills for momentary enjoyment is an act that’s reserved only for the loonies, well then, most of us are kind of crazy too, at least the ones among us who enjoy a fireworks display. Yes, I will admit that I am among those who tend to ooh and aah at the magnificent colors and amazing patterns that streak across the night sky and hold us enthralled. But then comes the sobering thought: How much are we contributing to the pollution of the earth’s atmosphere and the air we breathe by encouraging and participating in such displays?

The answer is not pleasant at all, because fireworks are among the largest polluters in terms of volume used.[*] For example, even a single firecracker is capable of causing high level of air pollution. In fact, fireworks are an absolute menace to human health and one of the biggest enemies to a green and clean earth because:

  • The manufacturing process is polluting: Fireworks contain a large amount of chemicals and heavy metals, which means that the manufacturing process produces harmful effluents that tend to pollute surrounding areas and water resources.[*] Also, most fireworks are manufactured in developing countries like India and China (for reasons of cost) where labor is cheap and anti-pollution laws are not stringent enough. Besides, there’s always the tendency to use substandard materials and harmful chemicals (some of which are banned) during the production process.
  • They contain harmful chemicals: The pretty colors we see showcased against the black sky are nothing but the effects of poisonous chemicals like barium, copper, cadmium, lithium, antimony, rubidium, strontium, lead and potassium nitrate. Some of them are radioactive[*] and can cause cancer while others increase the levels of perchlorate in the air and water and yet others cause respiratory problems and other chronic illnesses. High levels of perchlorate inhibit your thyroid’s ability to absorb iodide, and this leads to hypothyroidism and thyroid cancer.[*] Besides this, these chemicals have been proven to cause acid rain which is not good for the environment.
  • They contribute to noise pollution: This one’s a no-brainer—just ask anyone with a baby that needs to go to sleep how annoying and infuriating the sounds of firecrackers are, and you’re bound to get a earful. The noise is deafening and at times, when adequate safety precautions are not taken and the crackers are set off too close to human ears, there’s a high probability of damaged eardrums.
  • The debris litters the earth and surrounding resources: Falling debris from burned out firecrackers litter the ground and also pollute surrounding water resources. They are also liable to be swallowed by animals and fishes which then choke to death or die because they are poisoned by the chemical residue from the litter.
  • The smoke pollutes the air: Firecrackers emanate a lot of smoke which not only makes breathing difficult, but also adds to the existing pollution levels that are already dangerously high. The fumes are noxious and can cause and aggravate various respiratory illnesses like asthma and bronchitis.
  • They are dangerous: If adequate precautions are not taken, they can cause fires that destroy buildings and forests and also cause deaths and injuries.

It’s an irony that fireworks, being the heavy polluters that they are, are largely used to celebrate festivals and other occasions like Independence Day, because if we persist in encouraging this trend, the day is not far off when we’re going to be fighting a losing battle of another kind—the struggle to save our planet from global warming and pollution.

On the Net:

  1. Environmentally Friendly Fireworks And Other Pyrotechnics
  2. Longest String of Firecrackers causes pollution concern
  3. 10 reasons to shun dirty, deadly firecrackers
  4. Green Chemistry

Information about the Author:

This post was contributed by Holly McCarthy, who writes on the subject of organic coupons to make “living green and buying organic products easier for consumers everywhere.” She invites your feedback at hollymccarthy12 at gmail dot com


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

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AIR QUALITY: Air pollution regulations improve life expectancy, save lives

air-pollutionRegulations targeting particulate matter and other air borne pollutants are resulting in longer, healthier lives for Americans. Well, duh. From Wired News:

Clean air doesn’t just give Americans a pleasant, smog-free view. It’s added an average of five months to our lives.

In a study of three decades of health data from 51 U.S. cities, researchers found that people are living about three years longer than they did before. Controlling for changes in income, education, demographics and smoking, about five months of that can be chalked up to air improvements.

“Our efforts in the past 20 years to reduce air pollution through better technology and regulation have actually worked,” said Majid Ezzati, an international health expert at the Harvard School of Public Health. “People are living longer as a result of it.”


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

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ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS PICKS

ACID RAIN: Acid rain molecule tells all

AGRICULTURE: Urban farming blooms in London

AIR POLLUTION: China’s olympic pollution efforts paid off, expert says, Dutch paving stones clean air pollution: A Dutch University will see if chemically tricked-out paving stones can clean the air

ANIMAL MIGRATIONS: Vanishing animal migrations need saving, experts say

ARCTIC MELTING: Vanishing Arctic ice may hurt Japan’s wildlife, tourism

ENERGY: Green Conservative Newt Gingrich claims tire inflation lines big oil’s pockets, Power from your tailpipe? It’s possible

FOOD: The ruby roman: Japan’s colossal new grape

FUEL EFFICIENCY STANDARDS: Sweden requires fuel-efficient driving lessons

GEOTHERMAL ENERGY: Geothermal power tapping its potential: A New York seminary and 3 million households are discovering that it is a viable alternative as oil prices keep rising steeply

GLACIAL MELTING: Glaciers before and after

GLOBAL WARMING: Kangaroo farming could reduce global warming

HOUSING MARKET: Pets abandoned by owners after foreclosure: Animals are the newest mortgage victims as owners leave pets behind, House sold for $1 in sign of US property crisis: In a sign of how desperate the property crisis has become in parts of the US, a foreclosed house in Detroit has sold for just one dollar – around 50 pence, Swimming pools at foreclosed houses become mosquitoes’ home

HYBRID TECHNOLOGY: The 11 least fuel efficient hybrids

INVASIVE SPECIES: Invasive snail multiplying in Lake Michigan, Venomous lionfish prowls fragile Caribbean waters

JELLYFISH: Mysterious jellyfish swarms seen in Europe, U.S.

MADAGASCAR: Black-and-white ruffed lemurs (Varecia variegata) listed as critically endangered

MARINE MAMMALS: Humpback whales on road to recovery

NATURE: In shark vs. polar bear smackdown, shark wins: A polar bear jawbone recently found in the stomach of a Greenland shark

NUCLEAR WASTE: McCain camp lies about Nevada nuclear waste dump

OFFSHORE DRILLING: Comment by Wesley P. Warren, Director of Programs / NRDC, McCain appears on oil rig to strengthen call for offshore drilling: A July oil-rig appearance had been scuttled after Hurricane Dolly and a major oil spill both struck the Gulf of Mexico region, Worth the risk? Debate on offshore drilling heats up, Texas A&M economist weighs pros and cons of offshore drilling, Wellington chamber weighs pros, cons of offshore drilling

SCIENCE: Deep-diving seals are cheap labor for Antarctic surveys, ‘Sugar coating’ used to waterproof paper

ZOOLOGICAL CONSERVATION: Largest insectarium in the U.S. recently opened in New Orleans, Lonesome George a Father?

WIND POWER: Off shore wind farm locations found via satellite

ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS PICKS

AIR POLLUTION: Aérophile´s balloon turns different colors depending on the air pollution levels, as registered by the air quality organization Airparif.

AMERICAN CONSUMPTION OF NATURAL RESOURCES: Biggest drop in U.S. oil demand in 26 years

ANTARCTIC MELTING: Antarctic ice shelf breaking up in dead of winter: Experts surprised that cold hasn’t frozen trend, now expect quicker demise

BIODEGRADABLE: Green Earth Technologies, creator of organic engine products, has released their new automotive lubricant to its G-Oil line, a 10W-30 that has set a new biodegradability standard

CATTLE GRAZING: Federal rangeland managers said continuing to allow cattle to graze on the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument is harming the rare plants, fish and wildlife the monument was created eight years ago to protect

CHINA: Plight of the Little Emperors: Coddled from infancy and raised to be academic machines, China’s only children expect the world. Now they’re buckling under the pressure of their parents’ deferred dreams.

CLIMATE CHANGE: Cattails could be agents of climate change (The good kind)

CRYPTOZOOLOGY: Vampire hound caught on film?, Farmers claim they have seen the “Dracula dogs” sink their teeth into the necks of terrified livestock

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: Mitsubishi’s Electric Car Will Be Released in 2009 for $37,500

ENERGY: Honolulu to air condition buildings with seawater, $21 billion Alaska energy plan proposed: RENEWABLE AND ALTERNATIVE: Inclusion of coal in projects leaves some lawmakers less than happy, Utah four day work week environmentally friendly

ENERGY MIX OF THE FUTURE; SOLAR: How a giant solar tower could power the future

EXTINCTION: Wildlife extinction rates ‘seriously underestimated’

FISHERIES: Groups deliver 150,000 comments to Bush Administration calling for withdrawal of proposed rule that would undercut environmental review, stifle public input in oceans & fisheries management, Ocean fisheries protections to be weakened: Bush plan would give industry greater power over fishery management decisions, Since the Parties to the Nauru Agreement signed a Third Implementing Arrangement which among other measures include restricting fishing in the high seas and 100% observer coverage of purse seine vessels, there has been a lot of talk in the media about a new wave in regional fisheries management., Three crew members of the trawler Atria: accused of fish dumping, and the master is accused of failing to record catch correctly

FISHERIES OBSERVER: Fisheries program graduates its first two observers

FUEL ECONOMY: Teen drives on one tank of gas for entire summer

GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOODS AND ORGANISMS: Prince Charles warns GM crops risk causing the biggest-ever environmental disaster

GEOTHERMAL ENERGY: Geothermal energy will help power Anaheim, California

GLOBAL WARMING: Schwarzenegger confirms link between global warming and wildfires, hits Bush for not believing the science

GREEN: The world’s first eco-disco, Surya, opens for business, Using carbon dioxide as an ingredient in plastics could help reduce the use of fossil fuels, and be another market for waste CO2.

GREENWASHING: Nice jugs part 2: Green packaging or greenwashing

NEW SPECIES: 21 new species of livebearing fish named, British scientists have found new species of oral cavity bacteria which contribute to various mouth problems such as tooth decay, Bird species result of climate change?: A group of scientists are scratching their heads this week as they try to figure out how a new species of bird came to be, way up in the mountains of Vermont

OFFSHORE DRILLING: Navy opposes VA offshore drilling. Period. End of debate., Pelosi indicates openness to offshore drilling vote

OPEC: Opec income hits record as oil prices soar

ORGANIC MARKET: A capitalist dream: Company designs and maintains organic garden in your backyard

PLASTIC BAGS; STYROFOAM: Seattle’s ban on plastic and styrofoam

PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION: Levitating train from L.A. to Las Vegas gets boost: Bush signs law freeing dollars for levitating train from Disneyland to Las Vegas

SALMON: NORWAY: Farmed salmon in hot water

SCIENCE: Science close to unveiling invisible man, A new BBC series makes use of satellite technology to create stunning images of Britain from above, you can also see how everything has become so traceable with the use of GPS technology, Amateur astronomer spies gassy “cosmic ghost”, Bionic bra: Victoria’s circuit: Looking for a better way to charge her iPod on the go, Adrienne So had an idea – could she invent a bionic bra to harness the energy of her bouncing breasts?

SOLAR: New, cost effective solar energy devices from MIT, GM to build world’s biggest rooftop solar station in Spain: US automaker General Motors said Tuesday it will equip the roof of its factory in Zaragoza in northeastern Spain with solar panels to create the world’s largest rooftop source of power from the sun, 90% of Israeli homes solar hot water equipped, Hawaii first state to require solar water heaters, Solar energy creating economic boom for Nevada, U.S. allowing new solar again, Times Square gets solar-powered billboard, India launches climate change plan focusing on solar power, Community solar power, Dyeing to boost solar efficiency by 50%: MIT has perfected a dye technology that could change the solar world as we know it

SUBURBIA: What is the future of suburbia? A freakonomics quorum

UPWARD MIGRATION: Pacific species set to invade warmer Arctic, Atlantic waters

WAVE POWER: Giant rubber snakes to capture wave power?

WHALING: Japan says we are witnessing the death of the International Whaling Commission

WIND POWER: Village of Mackinaw City wind turbine generators: They went on line the day of the ribbon cutting, December 3rd, 2001. In their first 4 days of operation they produced enough energy to power 9 homes for a year. As of the Fall of 2003 they produced over 4,000,000 kWh of energy.

This project has received many positive comments from residents and visitors alike. The residents voice their pride in being part of such a project that brings renewable energy to the region. The visitors are impressed with the way they look. Some go so far as to call them kinetic sculptures., Argentina will produce massive wind power turbines, While U.S. off-shore wind industry struggles, Germany announces 30 new wind farms: European nation sets ambitious renewable energy goals, Debate flares over wind power in Texas