Environment
By Matt WassonIn the wake of EPA's veto last week of the largest mountaintop-removal mine permit ever proposed in West Virginia, the grandstanding of West Virginia politicians and "sky is falling" rhetoric from the coal industry was not surprising. Every effort to protect streams and communities from the devastating impacts of mountaintop removal has been met with a similar chorus of complaint by coal companies and local politicians.
However, the immediate response of coal industry groups and West Virginia politicians to the news of EPA's action was a little different this time around. Notably absent was any reference to the so-called "War on Coal," which had previously been a mainstay of the coal industry's talking points. Instead, every West Virginia politician and coal industry trade group that issued a response to EPA's action appeared to be reading from the same script -- a new one focused on broad national implications of EPA's action for all U.S. industries, not just coal. Apparently we are now to believe that the opposition of West Virginia politicians to any and all regulations protecting streams from obliteration by coal companies is not about any provincial concerns or pressure from the most powerful industry in their district, but about "regulatory certainty," national energy supply, national security, and the unemployment rate.
The new narrative about overbearing federal regulators stifling the economy and threatening national security fits nicely with the ideological persuasions of many new members of Congress. They would seem to be the primary target of the coal industry's new PR strategy, the goal of which is clearly to convince Congress to rein in the EPA and prevent the agency from promulgating new rules or enforcing existing ones. And the centerpiece of this new narrative is EPA's veto of the Spruce permit, which, it is increasingly apparent, was part of the coal industry's game plan all along...... Continue reading
However, the immediate response of coal industry groups and West Virginia politicians to the news of EPA's action was a little different this time around. Notably absent was any reference to the so-called "War on Coal," which had previously been a mainstay of the coal industry's talking points. Instead, every West Virginia politician and coal industry trade group that issued a response to EPA's action appeared to be reading from the same script -- a new one focused on broad national implications of EPA's action for all U.S. industries, not just coal. Apparently we are now to believe that the opposition of West Virginia politicians to any and all regulations protecting streams from obliteration by coal companies is not about any provincial concerns or pressure from the most powerful industry in their district, but about "regulatory certainty," national energy supply, national security, and the unemployment rate.
The new narrative about overbearing federal regulators stifling the economy and threatening national security fits nicely with the ideological persuasions of many new members of Congress. They would seem to be the primary target of the coal industry's new PR strategy, the goal of which is clearly to convince Congress to rein in the EPA and prevent the agency from promulgating new rules or enforcing existing ones. And the centerpiece of this new narrative is EPA's veto of the Spruce permit, which, it is increasingly apparent, was part of the coal industry's game plan all along...... Continue reading
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