Rachel's Democracy & Health News
#948, February 28, 2008
THE
LINK BETWEEN TOXIC CHEMICALS AND GLOBAL WARMING
[Rachel's introduction: If we could all climb out of our
foxholes for a moment and look around, we might see a huge opportunity spreading
out before us: the solutions to global warming and toxic chemicals are both
being thwarted by one group of people: coal company executives and their
helpmates.]
By Peter Montague
As never before, opportunity is
knocking for activists. The solutions to global warming and chemical
contamination are both peeking over the horizon and they look very much alike.
The timing is perfect for building a global coalition to promote waste-free green chemistry (or clean
production), end the rush toward coal-burning power plants, stuff the
nuclear genie back into the bottle, power the future with sustainable solar
energy, and advance environmental justice worldwide. From all this can flow many
millions of truly green jobs.
Global warming and chemical contamination
are two sides of the same coin, and solutions to both are now converging.
Activists fighting coal, fighting nuclear, fighting dangerous waste technologies
(landfills, incinerators and incinerators-in-disguise), fighting for the
cleanup of superfund sites and brownfields and toxic emissions, fighting all the
chemicals-and-health fights (childhood cancers, autism, diabetes, asthma,
Parkinson's and so many other environment- linked diseases), and fighting for
justice, joined with activists promoting solar, wind and biofuels,
promoting tidal power and geothermal, promoting green jobs, clean production and
green chemistry -- could now work together toward a common purpose. The
combination would create a mountain of political power.
To curb global
warming, we can transition as rapidly as possible to renewable solar, geothermal and tidal power, and to end
chemical contamination we can transition as rapidly as possible to green chemistry. But to do either of these things, we first
must get around one huge obstacle: the coal industry. I know that some
influential people are saying that fossil fuels are over, that oil has peaked
and coal is dead, but there's more to it than that.
Yes,
perhaps oil has reached -- or soon will -- peak production and will be declining
in volume each year, which foretells steadily rising prices (as we have seen --
a 10-fold increase since 2000). But coal is not dead. Coal
executives are planning to turn coal into liquid fuels and into chemical
feedstocks to replace oil. If they succeed, they will entrench coal for the next
100 years, derailing the drive toward green chemistry and clean production, and
eliminating the incentives for renewable energy. This is a strategic fork in the
road to the future. Which will we choose? This is a moment in history when
activism can make a crucial difference.
There is still a huge (though
surprisingly uncertain) amount of coal in the ground,
especially in the U.S., and we would be naive to think that the people who own
that coal are going walk away from it emptyhanded. Until it is all used up, they
plan to (a) burn it for electricity, (b) turn it into liquid fuels (diesel,
kerosene and jet fuel), or (c) turn it into chemical feedstocks (to create
plastics, pesticides, solvents, etc.)-- or they will sell it to China, which
will then burn it, liquify it, or turn it into chemicals. Peabody Energy of St.
Louis, the largest private coal company in the world, opened an office in
Beijing in 2005 because Chinese coal mines cannot keep up with demand, and U.S.
coal exports are now helping fill that gap.
With coal-fired electric
power now being fought to a standstill by a swarm of grass-roots activists all across the U.S.,
coal-to-liquids (CTL) and coal-to-chemicals are the most promising paths to
salvation for the coal industry. Private chemical companies can build coal-to-
chemical plants on their existing premises without getting any special licenses
of the kind required for electric utilities. Eastman Chemical (formerly a part
of Eastman Kodak) already derives 20% of its chemical feedstocks from coal and
is thinking about pushing that up to 40%.[1] General Electric -- which sells
coal gasification equipment needed for both coal-to-liquids and
coal-to-chemicals -- wants to sell coal gasifiers to electric utilities, "But in
the near term, turning coal to chemicals offers the most significant
opportunities," says Edward C. Lowe, general manager of gasification for GE
Energy.[1]
Coal-to-liquids and coal-to-chemicals both use heat and
pressure to break the molecular bonds in coal, producing gases (mostly carbon
monoxide and hydrogen), which can be recombined to make various fuels and
chemical feedstocks for paints, food additives, fertilizers, plastics, and all
manner of other modern molecules. Germany commercialized these chemical
processes before World War II, but after the war cheap oil shoved coal-gas
technology to the back burner. Now oil is growing expensive and the chemical
industry is paying roughly $40 billion per year for petroleum-based feedstocks,
so that's a huge new market for Big Coal to penetrate. If they succeed, they're
saved, if not, they're sunk. Their back is to the wall.
Coal-to-chemicals
plants will try to bury their waste carbon dioxide (CO2) in the ground, just the
way coal-fire power plants say they want to do -- so coal-to-chemicals and
coal-to-liquid-fuels could provide a laboratory for the untried "carbon capture and storage (CCS)" technologies needed to
create so-called "clean coal." If they can convince people that CCS works -- and
will keep working safely for thousands of years into the future -- they're
saved; if not, they're sunk. Current U.S. energy policy is providing large
taxpayer subsidies to coal-with-CCS, starving the research budget for renewable
energy.
The Wall Street Journal reported late last year that western chemical companies are
now flocking to China to participate in coal- to- chemicals projects, some of
which have an experimental carbon burial (CCS) component. Because of cheap labor
and lax regulations, such plants cost 30% to 50% less to build in China than in
the U.S. Several Chinese companies already use coal to manufacture vinyl
chloride monomer, the building block of PVC ("vinyl") plastic, and American and
European chemical firms want some of that action. "No one's made any real
commitments yet, says the editor of Chemical Week magazine, "but it's clear that
this is the beginning of a wave."[1] (Get more data about coal gasification in
China and worldwide from these slides.)
Coal-to-liquids and coal-to-chemicals will not
develop in the U.S. without a knock-down fight. This is where a big coalition of
toxics, environmental health, energy, and green jobs and environmental justice
activists could weigh in: Stopping coal-to-chemicals is essential to
create space for the emergence of clean production, green chemistry, renewable
energy and green jobs with justice. We are not going to have a coal-based
chemical industry and a green chemical industry. We'll have one or the
other, not both. And the same is true for electric power: if the public can be
convinced that "clean coal" is really clean and really safe, incentives for
renewables will dry up. We'll have coal or renewables, not both.
Here's
the thing. The Achilles' heel of the coal-to-chemicals industry, the
coal-to-liquid-fuels industry, and the coal-fired electric power industry
is carbon dioxide. Compared to petroleum-based fuels, coal-based fuels produce
twice as much CO2 per gallon. With Wall Street already looking askance at all coal-based technologies because
of the near-certainty that carbon emissions will face expensive regulation one
of these days, plans to bury CO2 in the ground take on new urgency for the coal
corporations. With it, they may have a future; without it, they're sunk. To
stop coal, activists just have to frighten the money.
Rarely in
history have activists on such a a broad range of issues been offered such a
clear strategic opportunity to work together to kill a deadly, wasteful dinosaur
like the coal-to-liquids, coal-to- chemicals and coal-to-electricity industries,
simultaneously opening up a future of green possibilities for ourselves, for the
world, and for our children.
==============
[1] Claudia H.
Deutsch, "Chemical Companies Look to Coal as an Oil Substitute," New
York Times April 18, 2006.