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EPA Rules On Coal Plants Will Force Some Of Dirtiest Plants To Shut Down, Survey Finds

Epa Coal Plants

By DINA CAPPIELLO   12/19/11 10:39 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- More than 32 mostly coal-fired power plants in a dozen states will be forced to shut down and an additional 36 might have to close because of new federal air pollution regulations, according to an Associated Press survey.

Together, those plants – some of the oldest and dirtiest in the country – produce enough electricity for more than 22 million households, the AP survey found. But their demise probably won't cause homes to go dark.

The fallout will be most acute for the towns where power plant smokestacks long have cast a shadow. Tax revenues and jobs will be lost, and investments in new power plants and pollution controls probably will raise electric bills.

The survey, based on interviews with 55 power plant operators and on the Environmental Protection Agency's own prediction of power plant retirements, rebuts claims by critics of the regulations and some electric power producers.

They have predicted the EPA rules will kill coal as a power source and force blackouts, basing their argument on estimates from energy analysts, congressional offices, government regulators, unions and interest groups. Many of those studies inflate the number of plants retiring by counting those shutting down for reasons other than the two EPA rules.

The AP surveyed electricity-generating companies about what they plan to do and the effects on power supply and jobs. It was the first survey of its kind.

The estimate also was based in part on EPA computer models that predict which fossil-fuel generating units are likely to be retired early to comply with the rules, and which were likely to be retired anyway.

The agency has estimated that 14.7 gigawatts, enough power for more than 11 million households, will be retired from the power grid in the 2014-15 period when the two new rules take effect.

The first rule curbs air pollution in states downwind from dirty power plants. The second, expected to be announced Monday, would set the first standards for mercury and other toxic pollutants from power plant smokestacks.

Combined, the rules could do away with more than 8 percent of the coal-fired generation nationwide, the AP found. The average age of the plants that could be sacrificed is 51 years.

These plants have been allowed to run for decades without modern pollution controls because it was thought that they were on the verge of being shuttered by the utilities that own them. But that didn't happen.

Other rules in the works, dealing with cooling water intakes at power plants and coal ash disposal, could cause the retirement of additional generating plants. Those rules weren't included in the AP survey.

While the new rule heralds an incremental shift away from coal as a power source, it's unlikely to break coal's grip as the dominant domestic electricity source. Most of the lost power generation will be replaced, and the coal-fired plants that remain will have to be cleaner.

"In the industry we retire units. That is part of our business," said John Moura, manager of reliability assessment at the North American Electric Reliability Corp. NERC represents the nation's electrical grid operators, whose job is to weigh the effect a proposed retirement will have on reliability.

With so many retirements expected, that process could get rushed. "We are getting a little hammered here, because we see multiple requests," Moura said.

NERC, along with some power plant operators, is pressing the Obama administration to give companies more time to comply with the rules to avoid too many plants shutting down at once.

In addition to anticipated retirements, about 500 or more units will need to be idled temporarily in the next few years to install pollution controls. Some of those units are at critical junctions on the grid and are essential to restarting the electrical network in case of a blackout, or making sure voltage doesn't drain completely from electrical lines, like a hose that's lost its water pressure.

"We can't say there isn't going be an issue. We know there will be some challenges," Moura said. "But we don't think the lights are going to turn off because of this issue."

That hasn't stopped some critics from sounding alarms.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said in a letter to the White House this month that the EPA mercury rule could "unintentionally jeopardize the reliability of our electric grid." At a speech in New Hampshire in November, GOP presidential candidate and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman predicted summer blackouts. A recent U.S. Chamber of Commerce ad said a single EPA regulation "could threaten America's energy supply."

Particularly at the older, less efficient plants most at risk, coal already was at a disadvantage because of low natural gas prices, demand from China and elsewhere that was driving up coal's price, and weaker demand for electricity.

For many plant operators, the new regulations were the final blow. For others, the rules will speed retirements already planned to comply with state laws or to settle earlier enforcement cases with the EPA. In the AP's survey, not a single plant operator said the EPA rules were solely to blame for a closure, although some said it left them with no other choice.

"The EPA regulation became a game changer and a deal changer for some of these units," said Ryan Stensland, a spokesman for Alliant Energy, which has three units in Iowa and one in Minnesota that will be retired, and four in Iowa that are at risk of shutting down, depending on how the final rules look. "Absent the EPA regulations, I don't think we would be seeing the transition that we are seeing today. It became a situation where EPA broke the back of coal."

Some believe the change is long overdue. The two rules will cut toxic mercury emissions from power plants by 90 percent, smog-forming nitrogen oxide pollution by half, and soot-forming sulfur dioxide by more than 70 percent.

"Many of them are super old. They've either got to be brought up to code, fixed with the best available technology, or close them down," said Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., who heads the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. "You can't keep on going."

The impact is greatest in the Midwest and in the coal belt – Kentucky, West Virginia and Virginia – where dozens of units probably will be retired.

Coal "is the fuel that is local to this area," said Leonard Hopkins, the fuel and compliance manager for the Southern Illinois Power Cooperative, which serves rural electric customers in 25 counties in the state. "We are scrambling to find ways to comply."

His options: switch to a lower sulfur coal, install additional pollution controls or retire the oldest boiler and buy cheaper power from elsewhere.

For many of the country's oldest coal-fired plants, retirement is the cheapest option.

"It is more expensive to retrofit these plants than retire them and build new generation," said Chris Whelan, spokeswoman for Kentucky Utilities, which announced in September that it was retiring three coal-fired power plants in the state. The plants, which came on line in 1947, 1962 and 1950, employ 204 people.

Whelan said the company is "going to do everything we can to reallocate the work" by shifting employees to a new gas-fired power plant.

In some places, a job at the power plant is the best thing going.

Thirty people work at the Central Electric Power Cooperative plant in Chamois, Mo., where EPA regulations have put the plant in danger of shutting down. Some employees are looking to see if there are other power plants where they could find work.

"We always knew there was a chance we could get shut down," said Robert Skaggs, who has worked at the 50-year-old power plant for 10 years and is also an alderman in the town of 400. "It's pretty obvious. Our plant is an old plant."

Chamois Mayor Jim Wright saw the sewing factory leave and doesn't understand why coal has to do the same.

"Coal's coal. If you are going to dig and ship it to China, you might as well burn it here," he said.

Electricity bills are also a concern.

Kentucky Utilities expects its customers to see as much as a 14 percent rate increase to make up for the $800 million it is spending to replace what will be retired, and the $1.1 billion it plans to spend on anti-pollution upgrades. Other power companies have applied to recoup the cost of retrofits or of building new gas-fired power plants. The EPA estimates that industry will spend $11 billion complying with the two rules by 2016.

For others, the biggest issue with plant retirements is the loss of property taxes. As plants wind down and close, their assessed value drops, reducing what they pay to local governments.

In Salem, Mass., Dominion plans to retire two units at the Salem Harbor Station later this year, a move that could halve the plant's workforce in a town famous for its 17th century witch trials and where the major business is tourism.

The loss of its 50-year-old power plant poses two dilemmas: how to replace its biggest taxpayer and what to do with the 60 acres of waterfront property when the plant is gone.

"It's not like losing a Dunkin' Donuts," said Mayor Kim Driscoll, noting that attractions such as Baltimore's Inner Harbor took decades to redevelop from abandoned industrial property.

For the next five years, Salem will make up for Dominion's dwindling $4.75 million tax bill with state money, but after that the future is unclear.

"It's a big chunk of change when you're looking at we still have the same number of kids in school, we still have the same number of calls for police and fire, we have the same number of parks and resources that need to be maintained and kept up," Driscoll said. "That's not to say there aren't folks locally that are happy with the fact that a coal-based plant won't be here forever. There are certainly folks here that see it as a way for Salem to flourish in other ways."

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WASHINGTON -- More than 32 mostly coal-fired power plants in a dozen states will be forced to shut down and an additional 36 might have to close because of new federal air pollution regulations, accor...
WASHINGTON -- More than 32 mostly coal-fired power plants in a dozen states will be forced to shut down and an additional 36 might have to close because of new federal air pollution regulations, accor...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS

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Coinyer101 11:01 AM on 12/19/2011
Hemp vs. Fossil Fuels
Pyrolysis facilities can use the same technology used now to process fossil fuel oil and coal. Petroleum coal and oil conversion is more efficient in terms of fuel-to-feed ratio, but there are many advantages to conversion by pyrolysis.
1) Biomass has a heating value of 5000-8000 BTU/lb, with virtually no ash or sulfur emissions.
2) Ethanol, methanol,  Read More...
Coal
Unlike petroleum reserves, America has enough coal to last 100-300 years, but burning it for electricity puts sulfur (toxic to every membrane in which it comes in contact, especially the simplest life forms - into the air, which leads to acid rain, which lills 50,000 Americans, and 5,000 - 10,000 Canadians, annually, and destroys the forests, river, and animals.
Charcoal can be created from biomass through pyrolysis (charcoaling), which has nearly the same heating value in BTU as coal, virtually without sulfur. Biomass can also be co-fired with coal to reduce emissions.
http://www.hemphasis.net/Fuel-Energy/fuel.htm
02:21 AM on 12/25/2011
We need a new smart grid for green energy! Phase out the old and bring in the new clean energy ASAP! The world needs leadership and change from us!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hikerguy22
Celebrate the end of Big Oil and Coal; and Meat?
04:28 PM on 12/21/2011
Whatever happens, your energy costs are going to go up. Big business like the Southern Company, and Edison will find a way to beat down the PSC or get their people on the Commission.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
09:03 PM on 12/20/2011
Hallelujah! Now whatever shall we do about the other 570 or so? I don't have the exact number, but that's pretty close.
They'll still be belching along, and mountains will still need knocking down.
Burning the stuff, straight or scrubbed, is just part of the problem
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seven Teenatheart
Tolerance, peace, and sanity. Be your own person.
06:43 PM on 12/20/2011
Power plants, such as the ones slated to be shut down, are the single biggest mercury polluters:
http://www.rodale.com/mercury-pollution-and-exposure

Doesn't it seem odd to anyone wanting to keep these plants open that people are not vaccinating their children in droves because vaccines used to contain minute amounts of mercury - but yet there's a huge move to keep the gross mercury polluters in business?

Yes, it's sad that part of our history is shutting down. And the job loss - the economy is in terrible shape.

But these plants had since what, 1972, to get upgrades? Those weren't done.
Our environment (and that of our children and grandchildren) is being polluted more and more. This is ridiculous.
Keeping these highly toxic power plants around is not the answer.
04:17 AM on 12/20/2011
And it would not happen a minute too soon! How many years have been wasted by not promoting and developing solar energy. But as usual...profits before people.
01:07 AM on 12/20/2011
Two of the plants on the list to be shuttered was constructed by UNION construction men like my father. The Kammer power plant south of Moundsville, WV was built in 1958 to provide electric to the Ormet alumium mill in Hannibal, Ohio. It was, as my dad said, state of the art at that time. The other plant on the list is the Willow Island power plant south of St. Marys, WV. It was built in 1949 and was my dad's very first construction job. When I travel between Wheeling and Parkersburg, I see my dad's handiwork from bridges, to schools, to power plants. I am glad my dad is no longer around to see this happen. He would be very upset at the whole situation.
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intolleft
ObamaCare...getting you shovel ready
11:56 AM on 12/20/2011
regulation by false endangerment findings before people you know.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
12:54 PM on 12/20/2011
EPA says 17,000 people die early from coal in the US every year.

CATF says 13,000 people die early from microparticulates from coal power in the US every year.

Now, how is coal protecting these people, again?
12:11 AM on 12/20/2011
The Electric Companies and the Coal industry dig in their heals and their ideology to keep the U.S forever in the era of the Flintstones. Combined with the oil industry they maintain the barrier that holds back technology, and the creation of new industries and new jobs!
03:48 PM on 12/20/2011
Mining Jobs: 82,595
Coal fired power plant jobs: 60,460
coal transportation jobs: 30,757

Tell these people holding these jobs how they will pay their bills when you bring us out of the era of the flintstones.
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One Percenter
We are the 100%
03:54 PM on 12/20/2011
How're you hippies gonna operate your electric cars without coal?
Solar Panels aren't even close to cutting it yet. Not by a long shot.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
04:46 PM on 12/20/2011
Cool, thanks for those statistics. That is 173,812 jobs in the coal industry.

Now, let's compare those 173,812 jobs to some other numbers:

'Specifically, Abt Associate’s analysis finds that fine particle pollution from
existing coal plants is expected to cause nearly 13,200 deaths in 2010.
Additional impacts include an estimated 9,700 hospitalizations and more
than 20,000 heart attacks per year. The total monetized value of these
adverse health impacts adds up to more than $100 billion per year.'

http://www.catf.us/resources/publications/files/The_Toll_from_Coal.pdf

Note that this is mortality from ONE form of coal pollution only, and that there are many others.

EPA, on the other hand, says:

'In 2016, these proposed rules would avoid:
6,800 – 17,000 premature deaths,
4,500 cases of chronic bronchitis,
11,000 nonfatal heart attacks,
12,200 hospital and emergency room visits,
11,000 cases of acute bronchitis,
220,000 cases of respiratory symptoms,
850,000 days when people miss work,
120,000 cases of aggravated asthma, and
5.1 million days when people must restrict their activities.'

Note that EPA does not estimate total coal-related mortality here, just the effect of the new rules in 2016.

http://www.epa.gov/airquality/powerplanttoxics/pdfs/proposalfactsheet.pdf

If we take the high end of the EPA numbers here, we see that for every ten coal jobs, one American dies every year.

Suddenly those statistics don't look so good, do they?
04:17 PM on 12/20/2011
Louisiana oil industry job production study:

* The extraction, refining, and pipeline sectors support more than 310,000 jobs in the state.
* Generated $1.4 billion in revenue for the state in taxes and fees in fiscal year 2010.
* Added $1 billion to local government revenues through direct taxes and indirect economic activity.
* Earnings and jobs in the energy sector can be found in all of Louisiana’s 64 parishes. In 15 of those parishes there were at least 1,000 people employed by the oil and gas industry.
* Generated $16 billion in household earnings for Louisiana families.
* The total value added to Louisiana’s economy from the oil and gas industry is nearly $55 billion in total income.

One additional important finding of the study is the multiplier of oil and gas employment; that is, the number of spinoff jobs created from each job created in the industry. In Louisiana, that multiplier is five. Put differently, each job created in the industry creates on average four additional jobs in support industries, including not only in oil and gas service firms but also in local restaurants, hotels, and other small businesses.
07:31 PM on 12/20/2011
Please explain to me why these workers can't be trained to move forward with new technology. The U.S. developed the technology that put men on the moon; GM created the most efficient electric car in the world, the EV 1.

The U.S. has been adapting to new technology for decades now- my father worked on an assembly line at Chrysler in the 60's and then the line became automated. He didn't loose his job, he retrained to new position.
g9
conservation ,votes with a brain not a party
10:54 PM on 12/19/2011
Sadly all coal power is dirty...even the best polute your air & your water...it also polutes the air yourchildrens & your grandchildrens breath.....The cost up front is great....the cost of COPD & cardio/polumnary illness is much greater, both in dollars & loss of a standard of life ...This is our future generations that will most benifit from these laws....Maybe the answer is to use out electricity wiser...instean of being the earths biggest user-per-person of energy...we can get in line with the rest of the world ...a smaller footprint and smaller economic growth will help our future generations...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Berman
10:42 PM on 12/19/2011
Let's see, power demand is up but we're going to cut power production. Very smart. By the way, if anyone thinks that electirc cars are a good idea, please keep in mind that we would need to increase our power generating capacity by a factor of three. Solar and wind are toys, sideshow items and will not serioulsy impact power generation. By 2030, as world power demand grows, it will take a new powerplant buit every 8 weeks just to keep even with useage. We have to stop fooling around and make a commitment on a huge scale, like the Manhattan Project or the Apollo Project to figure out how to build fusion reactors. The hydorgen isotope in a gallon of seawater could power the city of New York for a year, using fusion technology. If Mr. Obama wants to dump money into something for economic stimualation, it ought to be something that we can all benefit from and that would be energy produced by fusion technology.
11:13 PM on 12/19/2011
"Mr. Obama"

Try President Obama.
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Chris Berman
11:36 PM on 12/19/2011
Try him for what? Teason?
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blurredmolly
Was you ever bit by a dead bee?
07:46 PM on 12/19/2011
industry shills abound. you mopes need a hobby, like p33ing on third rails.
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intolleft
ObamaCare...getting you shovel ready
12:09 PM on 12/20/2011
Like the environmental industry? BTW....p1ssing in the third rail was Mythbusted.
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blurredmolly
Was you ever bit by a dead bee?
01:28 PM on 12/20/2011
then how about an electric fence? try it, you may like it.
06:52 PM on 12/19/2011
Biomass has been considered for fueling coal fired plants here. Downside is that the figures show that 80,000- 90,000 acres of biomass crop would be needed to fuel the one plant that is being converted. That figure begins to seem far less environmentally sound.
12:59 AM on 12/20/2011
They tried to do a biomass plant at an old coal power plant across the Ohio River from Moundsville, WV. It failed and was shuttered.
LTTR136
Paranoia sharpens your survival skills.
06:15 PM on 12/19/2011
"Probably" won't cause any blackouts. :Probably" will raise the cost of electricity. No "Probably" about it. Thousands added to the unemployment rolls too. Merry Christmas America? The government at work. Regulating our economy to death.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
06:42 PM on 12/19/2011
Regulating our economy from death due to coal is what you meant I am sure.

You may not have noticed this, but dead people don't usually need jobs.
LTTR136
Paranoia sharpens your survival skills.
01:30 AM on 12/20/2011
The EPA seems to be great at imposing impossible regulations on many industries. Quite often that results in the closing of more businesses which in turn causes more people to become unemployed. Right now does not seem like a good time to throw thousands more people on to unemployment. Sure I would like the air to be cleaner for everyone but I don't want to see more people without jobs. I would have less of a problem with this if the EPA could come up with more workable guidelines that would allow industries to keep functioning and not raise the cost of goods so high that the average person will see their standard of living fall even further than it already has.
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blurredmolly
Was you ever bit by a dead bee?
07:44 PM on 12/19/2011
like dirty air, do we?
05:36 PM on 12/19/2011
I'm very happy to see any of these disgustingly filthy power plants shut down - or at least idled until proper retrofits can be made. I don't mind paying higher costs for my electricity if it helps to save the environment from these horrifying toxins and make the world a better, cleaner place for my children to grow up and raise their kids. And, before I am attacked for "not knowing how expensive it could get", get a grip. I have an average monthly power bill in my home that currently exceeds $500, so even a 1% increase would be enough to notice. A 14% increase would be roughly $70/month for me, but I'm willing to pay that and cut back on other areas to balance it out if I know that dirty coal is going offline in favor of cleaner power generation.

We're doing our part to try and cut down by installing insulation, a new 98% efficient furnace, new energy-star-rated appliances, etc. that are driving us into debt. The power companies should be forced to do their part as well. It's a matter of health and safety. Go EPA!
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adoseofsanity
Recovering liberal.
06:00 PM on 12/19/2011
Spoken like a true leftist.
06:43 PM on 12/19/2011
A rich one with money to burn
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theo White
08:16 PM on 12/19/2011
Sound like someone that cares about others and the future. If you choose to drink polluted water or breath toxic air to China.
LTTR136
Paranoia sharpens your survival skills.
06:50 PM on 12/19/2011
I guess you must be one of the fortunate people who are still employed.
08:40 PM on 12/19/2011
Sort of. There are seven of us living in this home, 4 of which are adults. Out of them, there are 3 incomes (one person has 2 jobs). Of those three incomes, only one of them is full-time. One is part-time and one is seasonal. It's a stretch every month and a bit stressful, but it's worth it to know my children are well-cared-for and their future looks brighter. Even my 4-year-old knows how to recycle and enjoys doing it. That's progress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
adoseofsanity
Recovering liberal.
05:03 PM on 12/19/2011
This purely political pushing the lefty "CO2 is killing us" rationale. There is no other reason. We do not have broad air quality problem that this will solve. It will result in higher utility bills which of course, hurts the very people (those of more limited financial means) leftists always "claim" to care about. Just be honest liberals, you CRAVE for higher energy costs in both utility costs, and at the pump as a means to lower energy demand. It is complete utter foolishness. And it proves that you all don't care about the economic impact this will have to people in very real ways.
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Theo White
05:13 PM on 12/19/2011
What do you think is causing the acid rain that is destroying forests on the east coast. It is more that the air that is being ruined. Dead trees know no political party a well as bad air days. What is your logic that " liberals, you CRAVE for higher energy costs in both utility costs"? To create less demand? More irrational convoluted right wing corporate pandering.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theo White
05:45 PM on 12/19/2011
Money is of no value if you must breath fouled air or drink coal ash polluted water. What about future generations that will be the real losers of inaction? Acid rain is killing our forests. Do electricity costs outweigh health care costs? No! This not about liberal because the ill effects of dirty coal concerns everyone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
adoseofsanity
Recovering liberal.
06:07 PM on 12/19/2011
Theo......dude......we don't have fouled air nor are we drinking coal ash.........there is no connection between these energy plants and health care costs...put down whatever you are smoking......
04:59 PM on 12/19/2011
More time more time,thats how we got to where we are now ,kick the can down the road ,sounds a whole lot like the auto industry,we can't make cars that get 30 31 mpg it will bankrupt us,put hundreds of peolep out of work,same old same old.They always say the same thing in the way,it's going to cost to much and it will put a lot of people out of work,fear tactics.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
adoseofsanity
Recovering liberal.
05:40 PM on 12/19/2011
The economics are what they are. The only "fear" being instilled is by the eco-environmentalists. We have to "go green" or we will all die......yada yada yada. How about letting a free market work leftists instead of manipulating and trying to control it??????? Energy, housing, whenever leftists try to control/dictate the market place, BAD THINGS HAPPEN. I know, I know, not in your collective DNA. Most people, if left to their own choice, will not do what leftist want. So.....this sort of thing becomes justifiable in your self-richeousness.
09:19 AM on 12/20/2011
you have a point, even as bias as it is.But I really don't think that the envionment is a right or left problem. it's American .The right say they don't want to leave their children with debt that they have to pay for,by the way no one else dose ether,but what good is liveing debt free if you can't breath the air or drink the water . I think you for get just how concened buisness is when it comes to the so called free market.When these power plant keep wanting more tme,you think 40 50 years would be enough.Yes it is very bad when you have to regulate. It's Also bad when you have to have a Army and a police force to keep you safe.Yes the lift dose seem to care more about the whole US people and not just buisness and I for one are very glad that they do.