Lexington  Herald-Leader
 
Sunday, May. 30, 2010
Mountains' and bayous' sad camaraderie

 
 
 
Same weak enforcement plagues both oil drilling 
and coal mining


 
 
The unfolding story of this country's worst oil spill has a familiar ring 
in  Kentucky because of what our experience with coal has taught us to 
expect: 
Corporate management that puts production above all.  
Cozy relationships between regulators and the regulated. 
 


 
Government agencies that behave more as servants of industry than enforcers 
 of the law.  
Profound damage to the environment, people and culture of a region. 
"National sacrifice zone" is the phrase coined by author Jeff Goodell to  
describe what the rapacious stripping of coal to generate electricity has 
made  of Kentucky and West Virginia. 
Now our thirst for oil threatens to exact an equally high price from the 
Gulf  of Mexico, turning its beaches, marshes, bayous, people and wildlife 
into  another national sacrifice zone. 
Last week, as it was revealed that BP and the federal government had been  
grossly underestimating the size of the spill, The New York Times reported 
that  BP used the riskier of two methods to seal the well, partly for 
financial  reasons.  
Eleven people died in the April 20 explosion which, according to BP's  
investigation, came after five hours of warning signs that something was wrong. 
 
The failure of the rig's blowout preventers raise questions about whether 
the  safety devices would work on other Gulf rigs.  
The Washington Post reported that the federal agency responsible for  
regulating offshore drilling has repeatedly ignored warnings from government  
scientists about environmental risks in order to quickly approve permits. This  
is the same agency whose ethics-challenged employees became notorious for  
exchanging sex, drugs and gifts with members of the industries they were  
supposed to police. 
While nothing quite that sensational has come to light in the coalfields,  
there have been repeated examples, from the Martin County slurry spill to  
underground mining disasters, of government agencies enabling the industry to 
 take dangerous shortcuts. Not to mention the abdication of responsibility 
by  state and federal agencies that enabled the destruction of hundreds of 
miles of  streams and the wholesale leveling of mountains in the absence of 
legitimate  plans for post-mining land use. 
The people of the Appalachian Mountains and Louisiana bayous have a lot 
more  in common than fiddle tunes and distinctive accents.  
More than most, they are called on to sacrifice to satisfy this nation's  
appetite for fossil fuels. And more than most, they are economically 
dependent  on energy production. 
Something else that the regions have in common: The easily accessible  
reserves of oil and coal have been depleted. One reason the BP well has been so 
 
hard to plug is because it's a mile underwater and reaches five miles 
beneath  the ocean's floor.  
Extracting what remains of this country's coal and oil will require ever  
greater risks to human life and the environment. 
Add that to all the other reasons for aggressively promoting conservation 
and  renewable energy. 



Read more: 
_http://www.kentucky.com/2010/05/30/1285732/mountains-and-bayous-sad-camaraderie.html#ixzz0pUCRDryC_
 
(http://www.kentucky.com/2010/05/30/1285732/mountains-and-bayous-sad-camaraderie.html#ixzz0pUCRDryC)
 
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