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Exaggerated Coal-Ash Dangers: Part II

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- March 16, 2017

“Newly confirmed EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and the Trump Administration are encouraging states to solve their own problems. Coal-related controversies like these offer many states and communities excellent opportunities to find novel solutions that recognize sound science, hidden agendas, often limited options, and undesirable repercussions of poorly informed policy decisions. Let’s hope they are up to the task.”

Preventing ruptures and spills is primarily a function of selecting, building, and maintaining the best possible ash landfill facilities. A much more vital and fundamental issue involves alleged toxicity risks. Anti-coal activists insist the risks are unacceptably high; sound science says otherwise. (Also see Part I yesterday)

Like the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), North Carolina sets allowable Cr-6 limits at 100 ppb for drinking water (equivalent to 100 seconds in 33 years or 4 cups in 660,000 gallons of water). …

Exaggerated Coal-Ash Dangers: Part I

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- March 15, 2017

“Companies have proposed turning the ash into cement blocks or gravel, for construction projects. Vocal activists quickly nixed that option, even though it would solve multiple problems and involve virtually no contamination risks. It’s becoming increasingly apparent that the real reason for all the vocal consternation is that these agitators simply hate coal and want to drive it out of business.”

“Some activists say Duke (and other companies) should simply dig up millions of tons of ash from various depositories. Not only would that involve hundreds of thousands of dump truck loads, millions of gallons of fuel, and huge dump trucks lumbering through towns and along back roads and highways. A far more basic question is: Take it where, exactly?”

Scary coal ash stories make you wonder: What energy will be left when activists are done?

How NOT to Regulate Pesticides: EU, Canada Lessons for Trump (Part II)

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- December 16, 2016

“This election was about ‘draining the swamp’ and changing the way Washington works. Neonics and other US EPA actions would be a good place to begin.”

Canadian regulators have followed the EU’s (flawed) lead. For years, environmentalists and beekeepers in Ontario and Quebec Provinces have battled farmers and beekeepers in the rest of Canada over whether neonics pose a threat to bees. It’s the tail wagging the dog, since 80 percent of beekeeping is in these other provinces.

Canadian law requires that every incidence of beehive losses be described in an exhaustive examination and reported to HealthCanada. Reports filed from the beginning of record-keeping through 2012 show that the majority of bee-kill incidents reported in Canada occurred in 2012, and most came from one province (Ontario), where many beekeepers are hobbyists.…

How NOT to Regulate Pesticides: EU, Canada Lessons for Trump (Part I)

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- December 15, 2016

Powering Countries, Empowering People: A Case Study (Part 3 of 3)

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- September 22, 2016

Powering Countries, Empowering People: A Case Study (Part 2 of 3)

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- September 21, 2016

Powering Countries, Empowering People: A Case Study (Part 1 of 3)

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- September 20, 2016

EPA’s Gold King Whitewash, Part III

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- September 28, 2015

EPA’s Gold King Whitewash, Part II (What EPA, DRMS, and ER should have done)

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- September 24, 2015

EPA’s Gold King Whitewash: Part I

By <a class="post-author" href="/about#p_dreissen">Paul Driessen</a> -- September 23, 2015