Foreign Policy Blogs

Something's Rising

Something's Rising

I’ve written many times about the “despicable practice” of mountaintop removal mining.  (Al Gore called it that – and he couldn’t be more right.)  There’s an op-ed in the NY Times today from one of the co-authors of a new book:  Something’s Rising: Appalachians Fighting Mountaintop Removal.  Silas House remind us in “My Polluted Kentucky Home” that this is not only an environmental crisis, but “…it’s a human crisis as well, scraping away not just coal but also the freedoms of Appalachian residents, people who have always been told they are of less value than the resources they live above.”

Welcome, Appalachia, to the Global South, where oil companies take what they want from the jungles of Ecuador and the shores and mangroves of Nigeria, the people be damned.  You belong to the same world of the Navajo in Arizona and the miners in Niger and their families, exploited for uranium.  Pioneering groups like Global Witness have long recognized the links between resource extraction and conflict, corruption and “…associated environmental and human rights abuses.”  And coal extraction, at the expense of everything else, retards the local economy, preventing people from expanding their job and development opportunities.  It’s called the resource curse.

But Appalachians have been fighting back.  And, finally, the EPA is joining in, drawing a line in the sand.

Is coal really more important than people’s lives?  It’s absurd to even have to be asking that question.

 

Author

Bill Hewitt

Bill Hewitt has been an environmental activist and professional for nearly 25 years. He was deeply involved in the battle to curtail acid rain, and was also a Sierra Club leader in New York City. He spent 11 years in public affairs for the NY State Department of Environmental Conservation, and worked on environmental issues for two NYC mayoral campaigns and a presidential campaign. He is a writer and editor and is the principal of Hewitt Communications. He has an M.S. in international affairs, has taught political science at Pace University, and has graduate and continuing education classes on climate change, sustainability, and energy and the environment at The Center for Global Affairs at NYU. His book, "A Newer World - Politics, Money, Technology, and What’s Really Being Done to Solve the Climate Crisis," will be out from the University Press of New England in December.



Areas of Focus:
the policy, politics, science and economics of environmental protection, sustainability, energy and climate change

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