Sierra Club isn't lone opponent of coal plants
By Brian Moench
Published: Sunday, April 27, 2008 1:15 a.m. MDT
On April 16, the Deseret News ran a very misleading article regarding the
Sierra Club's role in the ongoing statewide battle over whether to build
more coal-fired power plants. The article implied that the Sierra Club took
total credit for delaying the construction of the Intermountain Power Unit
No.3 and Bonanza coal plants and that state legislators were battling
primarily the Sierra Club in their effort to commit the state to ongoing
fossil-fuel dependency.
This assertion is not true. There are much larger forces at play here with
regards to whether these projects get built, something that the story failed
to even mention.
Meanwhile, it is regrettable that a vocal minority of legislators remain
dogmatic in rejecting the overwhelming scientific evidence linking our
personal and planet health to reducing, not expanding, fossil-fuel
combustion. As the number of coal proponents and climate change deniers
steadily shrinks worldwide, it is imperative that mainstream media provide
balanced stories and factual information in lieu of perpetuating the myth
that it is just "environmental wackos" who are heeding the warnings of the
entire, peer-reviewed scientific community.
The U.S. Supreme Court, with a majority of conservative judges, told the
EPA over a year ago that it should start regulating CO2 as a pollutant, and
the EPA last month announced it was embarking on a rule-making process.
President Bush finally acknowledged last week the perils of global warming,
and all three presidential candidates are committed to addressing these
scientific realities. Polls show that over 80 percent of Utahns support
clean, renewable energy options in lieu of more coal. Even the Deseret News
editorial board has declared that new coal power plants can no longer be
part of our energy future.
The Utah Sierra Club is only one of dozens of diverse organizations,
mainstream businesses and health groups, representing thousands of citizens,
that are recognizing the health and climate imperatives of obtaining our
energy from clean, renewable sources instead of more coal. Unfortunately,
some legislators seem to equate personal virtue with a tenacious devotion to
fossil fuels, a position requiring wholesale denial of evidence from all
scientific disciplines including climatology, biology, geology, physics and
public health. It even contradicts recent studies focused on business
opportunities and future economic health.
I am not a member of the Sierra Club, but we should all be grateful that for
years the Sierra Club has been begging us to listen to the scientists who
study the consequences of environmental degradation. Thankfully the public
is starting to listen. It's time for all state legislators to do the same.
Dr. Brian Moench is president of Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment.
Copyright by deseretnews.com: To subscribe or
visit go to: http://deseretnews.com
|