Article published Apr 19, 2008
Obama, Clinton woo coal vote in primaries
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON Ñ Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are walking a delicate line as they promise to aggressively tackle global warming while trying to assure voters that they continue to believe in the future of coal.
In states like Pennsylvania, where voters will cast ballots this Tuesday, and in West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana and Montana Ñ upcoming primary states Ñ coal sways voters.
While increased mechanization has produced a dramatic decline in coal industry employment, the numbers remain substantial. There are 47,000 coal workers in Pennsylvania and West Virginia and 21,000 in Kentucky, according to the National Mining Association. The three states are the countryÕs biggest coal producers after Wyoming. Both Obama and Clinton have rallied environmentalists with their promises to develop windmills, solar power and other renewable energy sources and order mandatory reductions in greenhouse gases from power plants to counter global warming. ItÕs an energy policy that would seem to target coal, which produces half the countryÕs electricity but also nearly 2 billion tons of carbon dioxide, the leading greenhouse gas, each year. Instead, Òclean coalÓ has become the mantra of both candidates. Some environmentalists are not too happy with that. ÒThey keep using the term Ôclean coal.Õ ThatÕs really an oxymoron,Ó snaps Brent Blackwelder, president of the environmental group Friends of the Earth. ÒThey absolutely are pandering the coal industryÕs propaganda that clean coal is the hope of the future. ThereÕs no such animal as clean coal.Ó Not all environmentalists are as critical, acknowledging that coal will remain an integral part of the countryÕs energy picture. The two Democratic presidential aspirantsÕ support for coal is outweighed by their strong push for renewable fuels and Ñ unlike President Bush Ñ their call for mandatory, economy-wide action on climate change. ÒHow they finesse things on the margin is up to them,Ó said Cathy Duvall, the Sierra ClubÕs national political director, as long as they also Òtalk about moving away from conventional coal ... and putting money into and investing in a renewable energy economy that will provide jobs.Ó Obama, by representing Illinois, a top 10 coal producing state, has a little more experience at it than Clinton. Fifteen months ago, he joined Republican coal-state Sen. Jim Bunning of Kentucky in calling for loan guarantees and tax breaks for coal-to-liquid processing plants. Environmentalists protested and he modified his proposal to include a requirement that such plants have carbon-capture technology and produce 20 percent less greenhouse gases than conventional diesel fuel refineries. In reality, there is little difference in the broad energy agendas of Obama and Clinton. Both have endorsed Senate legislation that would cut greenhouse gas emissions by more than 70 percent by mid-century through mandatory pollution limits on power plants, transportation and industry. Both have called for a $150 billion, 10-year clean-energy research and development program. But neither has embraced the call by Al Gore and many Democrats in Congress for a moratorium on new coal-burning power plants until carbon capture can be commercially developed. The coal states are pivotal not only in the Democratic primary but also in the general election in November. Gore and John Kerry carried two of them Ñ Pennsylvania and Illinois Ñ in the last two presidential elections, but both lost to President Bush in West Virginia, historically a Democratic stronghold. Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, also has endorsed a limit on greenhouse gases, although one less aggressive, but views continued coal use as imperative to meeting future energy needs. At stops in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Montana and Wyoming, the Democratic rivals have been careful to tell voters they donÕt want coal to disappear. Frequently they couch it in terms of clean, green energy development and jobs. ÒWe could invest in renewable sources of energy and in clean coal technology and create up to 5 million new green jobs in the bargain, including new clean coal jobs,Ó Obama declared at a stop in Charleston, W.Va. Clinton also gave a nod to King Coal when she was in Charleston. ÒIÕve been saying all along we should have clean coal, the cleanest coal possible,Ó she told a high school gymnasium crowd. ÒIf weÕre serious about investing in clean coal and clean energy, we can create 5 million new jobs in 10 years.Ó Is it what coal producers and users want to hear? ÒAbsolutely,Ó said Joe Lucas, a vice president for the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity. ÒNone of them are saying that we arenÕt going to need coal.Ó But Lucas, whose group is financed by coal companies, utilities and transportation interests, also compared the candidatesÕ pitches to their embrace of corn-produced ethanol in Farm Belt states such as Iowa. At times, walking the line between coal and environmentalists hasnÕt been easy, especially when the topic became mountaintop mining, a practice prevalent in West Virginia, where large areas of mountain tops are stripped away to reach the coal. Clinton drew the ire of some environmentalists when in public radio interview there she said she was ÒconcernedÓ about mountaintop mining but also viewed it as an Òeconomic and environmental trade-offÓ that must be Òlooked at ... from a practical perspective.Ó Facing a group of environmentalists opposed to mountaintop mining at a meeting in the coal town of Beckley, W.Va., Obama also talked about the balance between economics and environmental protection. ÒThere are environmental consequences to coal extraction,Ó said Obama, Òjust as there are with any energy source.Ó ThatÕs just what some of the mine workers in the audience wanted to hear.