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Published bySarah Underwood Modified over 9 years ago
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Eastern Coal Conference Rep. Phil Roe TN-01
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Coal’s Past 18 Months Legislative – House Cap-and-Trade Bill – Lieberman/Kerry Legislation Regulatory – MSHA/Congressional Investigation over Safety – EPA Guidance on Surface Coal Mining – EPA Effort to Reclassify CO 2 as Pollutant
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Mountaintop/Surface Coal Mining Coal yields 44% of our electricity nationwide Mountaintop Mining accounts for 10% of coal supply, which is nearly 5% of overall electricity supply EPA’s April 1, 2010 guidance has not had to stand up to public scrutiny
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Safety Regulations New Regulations May Be Needed Concern About Legislative Overreach Right Regulations v. Overregulation Miners Lives Are On The Line – Must Get It Right
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Mine Safety After Upper Big Branch Key Questions Congress Will Try to Answer: – What happened and why? – Was there a pattern of violation? – Could whistleblower protections have helped?
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Effects of Cap-and-Tax Average increase of $3,100 per household if all costs estimated in an MIT study are passed on to consumers 3 million manufacturing jobs lost; 800,000 jobs lost total (Heritage) $5 trillion in GDP lost over 20 years (Heritage) Decreased competitiveness with China and India (not required to lower emissions)
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States Differing Electricity Costs Tennessee Costs $8.18/kWh Primary Sources – Coal: 63% – Nuclear 30% – Hydroelectric: 6% Connecticut Costs $17.79/kWh Primary Sources – Nuclear: 50% – Natural Gas: 26% – Coal: 14% Source: Energy Information Administration
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Why is There Support for Cap-and-Trade? High-Cost Energy States Raise Cost of Coal Low-Cost Energy States See Prices Rise Employers Stop Moving Jobs Out of High-Cost Energy States Cap-and-Trade Becomes an Equalizer
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Energy = Good v. Evil?
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