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DYING TO WORK: THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

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Page 1: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. Information from its

description page there is shown below.

Commons is a freely licensed media file repository.

You can help.

This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Generic license.

•You are free:to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work•to remix – to adapt the work•Under the following conditions:attribution – You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5 CC-BY-2.5 Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 truetrue

Date/Time

Thumbnail

Dimensions User Commen

t

current 02:57, 12 July 2005

768 × 512 (237 KB)

Komencanto

Strip coal mining (location unknown). {{Planet Geography}} Source: a {{cc-by-2.5}} Category:Mining\

DYING TO WORK: THE HUMAN

COST OF COALby

Dr Chris JamesFor Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

Page 2: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

BROWN COAL IS PARTICULARLY UNSTABLE AND HIGH RISK…

• In 2007 the Yallourn Coal mine, the major source of electricity supply, collapsed and although repairs were made,

according to the Department of Primary Industries [DPI] it was likely to collapse again. The Victorian Department

of Primary Industries’ investigated the Yallourn Coal Mine collapse and issued a Regulatory Impact Statement with

a view to amending the Mineral Resources Regulations to account for the increased risks. In the statement the

DPI wrote

It is difficult to explicitly mandate safety outcomes to be achieved by regulation…The benefit society receives

from the practice of mining is inseparable from the risks it creates…Brown coal in particular creates high risks…

Collapse of land on which public infrastructure [i.e. road bridges, railway] exists resulting in deaths and injuries.

IN 2012 THE MINE COLLAPSED AGAIN, THANKFULLY WITH NO LOSS OF LIFE.

Department of Primary Industries Victoria. 2010 Regulatory Impact Statement amending the Mineral Resources Regulations 2010 p32,

Page 3: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

The DPI gave Lake Concordia at Nachterstedt, Germany as its example of a coal related collapse. On the 18th July 2009, at Lake Concordia, three people were killed when several houses slid into a man made lake that was on the site of a former brown coal mine. Approximately a 350 metre stretch of shoreline and approximately one million cubic tonnes of soil collapsed. Further failures were expected to occur and residents were evacuated.

__________________________________________________________

In February 2011 deep holes appeared in Morwell’s Princess Freeway, which runs close to the Yallourn mine, this resulted in authorities closing a large section of road for approximately three months. The problem was attributed to water.

In July 2012 a sinkhole had to be filled temporarily along the V/Line rail track until extensive work could be carried out to stabilise the area.

Department of Primary Industries Victoria. 2010 Regulatory Impact Statement amending the Mineral Resources Regulations 2010 p32, Princess Freeway Morwell Bypass Closure www.vicroads.vic.gov.au

Page 4: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

Coal seams generally correspond with fault lines.

“Australia is not as geologically stable as many think.

Despite popular belief, Australia is a geologically active continent with moving fault-lines, regular seismic activity, and a long history of mountain making”, said internationally respected geologist, Associate Professor Malcolm Wallace from the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne.

Coober Pedy Regional Times Sept. 26th 2008.

Page 5: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

EARTHQUAKE RISKS: GIPPSLAND’S MAJOR FAULT SYSTEM:[ASP] 2009.

Page 6: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

Seismic Data and current well distribution [ASP] Australian School of Petroleum 2009.

Page 7: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

Shallow Seismic Activity.

Page 8: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

MORE COAL: WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR COMMUNITIES?

The Australian government’s determination to push ahead with major new coal projects will make coal the new asbestos in health related issues.

Page 9: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

• Thousands of coal miners die each year, some from accidents many more die from coal related illnesses, pneumoconiosis [CWP] [sometimes called black lung disease], progressive massive fibrosis, emphysema, chronic bronchitis and accelerated loss of lung function.

• Coal causes considerable health and environmental damage before it is used for power generation.

• Fossil fuels are dirty and dangerous. • Coal, oil and gas are inextricably linked to global

power and conflict.• International Agency for Research on Cancer [IARC] http://www.inchem.org/documents/iarc/vol68/coal.html

Page 10: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

• Disturbance of coal in all its forms liberates toxic heavy metals, carcinogens and radioactive elements that spread mass contamination.

• Open cut mining leads to wind-blown particles, which when uncontained can cause cancers and neurological diseases.

• Coal is a very poisonous substance. • Coal is mined in 70 different countries. Amongst the

worst offenders are the United States [US], Canada, China, New Zealand [NZ], Poland, Russia, the United Kingdom [UK] and Australia.

• Coal in Australia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_in_Australia

Page 11: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

• In the past ten years, over 10,000 American miners have died from coal related diseases. Australia’s records in relation to the health risks associated with coal are sketchy and tend to be lost in the correlation of other sectors, but significant health related clusters occur. In the Hunter Valley town of Singleton five residents around a single block were struck with brain tumours, but the reports of a cancer cluster due to coal have been played down.

• ABC News. Up to 40% of Hunter children have had asthma

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/05/06/2892234.htm • Health Study Denied Despite Cancer Clusters. Sydney Morning Herald

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/health-study-denied-despite-cancer-cluster-20100411-s0w6.html

Page 12: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

• Australia continues to have one of the highest rates of asthma per capita in the western world, affecting 14-16% of children and 10-12% of adults and areas like the New South Wales [NSW] Hunter Valley have some of the highest rates of asthma within Australia. 40 per cent of 9 to 15-years-olds in the region have suffered from asthma at some stage. In the US there are currently about 42,000 underground coal miners at risk of contracting coal related illnesses. The number is increasing in Australia.

• ABC News. Up to 40% of Hunter children have had asthma http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/05/06/2892234.htm

Page 13: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

• There are well documented and historical examples of

work-related cancer clusters in the medical literature. • For example, scrotal cancer among chimney sweeps in

18th century and workers in the US who are exposed to the same heavy metals and chemicals contained in coal.

National Disease Clusters Alliance http://clusteralliance.org/2008/05/04/eight-cancer-clusters-discovered-in-delaware/ • In 2010 the American Massey coal mining company was

responsible for 25 deaths in one mine alone and it was reported that the company would not even allow their workers time off to attend their friends’ funerals.

WSWS. Org. Deadliest US mine disaster in nearly 40 years: Families begin to bury 29 killed in West Virginia explosion. By Andre Damon and Samuel Davidson 12 April 2010.

Page 14: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

• In 2010 Queensland announced a doubling of its coal exports by 2030 putting an estimated 460 million tonnes of CO2s per annum into the atmosphere. This significantly adds to the loss of arable lands, protected species and poor health for people living in the designated coal producing areas.

• These projects incur the need for massive infrastructure especially for coal transportation and export, which further diminishes air quality.

Page 15: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

Coal Corporations do not admit guilt!• In February 2009, about 250 American people filed suit against coal

companies when they alleged mining poisoned wells in two communities in southern West Virginia. The lawsuit contended that coal companies pumped waste coal slurry in empty mines, and that underground cracks allowed the waste to pollute an aquifer. The state Department of Environmental Protection claimed it was unable to link the wells to the injection site. Nonetheless, the lawsuit targeted eight coal companies, including Massy Energy, Peabody Energy and subsidiary Pine Ridge Coal, and West Virginia's Federal Coal Co. In April 2009, a settlement agreement was reached pending judicial approval. The settlement called for the coal companies to contribute $45,000 to a fund to provide drinking water to residents in the Seth-Prenter area. The companies stated as part of the agreement that the payment does not constitute any admission of guilt and is inadmissible in court.

Charleston Daily Mail April 7th 2009.

Page 16: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

Shame Australia!

Victoria’s Hazlewood power facility is one of the dirtiest coal fired power stations in the industrialised world

emitting around 17 millions tonnes of CO2 every year. In 2010-2011 there were a concerted number of public

calls to close the Hazlewood power station. However, closing Hazlewood power facility would not save the

planet from the many other hazardous processes involving coal. In Australia coal is used to generate

electricity and is exported. 75% of the coal mined in Australia is destined for eastern Asia. Coal also provides

about 85% of Australia's electricity production. In fiscal year 2008/09, 487 million tonnes of coal was mined,

and 261 million tonnes exported. Australia is the world's leading coal exporter. The burning of coal produces

42.1% of Australia's greenhouse gas emissions, not counting export coal [based on 2004 GHG inventory].

Exporting pollution does not put Australia in a good light amidst the international community.

Climate Change Org. http://news.climatechange/coal and Climate Action Centre.Org Friends of the Earth Chain Reaction #107 November 2009 p17and Coal in Australia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_in_Australia

Page 17: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

There is no such thing as clean coal!!!

Coal Companies will tell you there are new technologies, carbon capture and storage. They may say, coal is ‘clean’ now! Carbon

capture and Storage [CCS] is in the experimental stage , it may never come online.

On Thursday 21st Jan 2010 the Victorian Energy Minister Peter Bachelor rolled out details of a twenty-nine million dollar plan to

cut Victoria’s carbon footprint with a one million dollar study into retro-fitting Loy Yang Power Station with new carbon capture

technology [CCT], but CEO Ian Nethercote admitted large scale reductions in emissions were still a long way off. “It’s not going to

change things tomorrow, this is one that has got some long term activity associated with it,” said Nethercote.

If CCT/CCS works it will mean more open cut mines.

No more fossil fuels: Save our communities.

Clean Coal Projects http://www.wintv.com.au/gippsland/news/item/22261 www.vic.gov.au And The Search for BP's Oil www.vic.gov.au May 2010.

Page 18: DYING TO WORK:  THE HUMAN COST OF COAL by  Dr Chris James For Lock the Gate Gippsland. 2012

TO SAVE OUR COMMUNTIES…

LOCK THE GATE.