Berliner Boersenzeitung - Despite disasters, climate is a taboo election issue in US coal country

EUR -
AED 4.050687
AFN 75.848066
ALL 98.795379
AMD 427.150285
ANG 1.9891
AOA 1021.230541
ARS 1071.6997
AUD 1.611444
AWG 1.985112
AZN 1.878559
BAM 1.954684
BBD 2.228448
BDT 131.884693
BGN 1.955744
BHD 0.415697
BIF 3201.858822
BMD 1.10284
BND 1.431422
BOB 7.626541
BRL 6.041138
BSD 1.10368
BTN 92.653134
BWP 14.598929
BYN 3.61187
BYR 21615.669352
BZD 2.22465
CAD 1.49506
CDF 3165.151727
CHF 0.939402
CLF 0.036482
CLP 1006.662575
CNY 7.774694
CNH 7.788633
COP 4617.437826
CRC 572.178472
CUC 1.10284
CUP 29.225267
CVE 110.200576
CZK 25.323416
DJF 196.539557
DKK 7.459529
DOP 66.362708
DZD 146.885429
EGP 53.328835
ERN 16.542604
ETB 133.37835
FJD 2.427627
FKP 0.839878
GBP 0.840116
GEL 3.010741
GGP 0.839878
GHS 17.48178
GIP 0.839878
GMD 76.095968
GNF 9528.6455
GTQ 8.537009
GYD 230.895017
HKD 8.565517
HNL 27.536526
HRK 7.498223
HTG 145.629486
HUF 401.665292
IDR 17056.196811
ILS 4.197917
IMP 0.839878
INR 92.594356
IQD 1445.774456
IRR 46415.789598
ISK 149.269301
JEP 0.839878
JMD 174.222098
JOD 0.781585
JPY 161.53523
KES 142.36577
KGS 93.145677
KHR 4479.482812
KMF 492.42639
KPW 992.555621
KRW 1471.199361
KWD 0.337403
KYD 0.919775
KZT 532.725811
LAK 24370.084569
LBP 98833.361863
LKR 324.364786
LRD 220.730959
LSL 19.298081
LTL 3.256401
LVL 0.667097
LYD 5.248051
MAD 10.781197
MDL 19.314147
MGA 5008.231101
MKD 61.579838
MMK 3581.982188
MNT 3747.451198
MOP 8.829458
MRU 43.600499
MUR 51.017477
MVR 16.939506
MWK 1913.74195
MXN 21.350932
MYR 4.668873
MZN 70.443885
NAD 19.298081
NGN 1828.057265
NIO 40.617912
NOK 11.691568
NPR 148.248694
NZD 1.775153
OMR 0.424602
PAB 1.10367
PEN 4.111153
PGK 4.393571
PHP 62.129593
PKR 306.435981
PLN 4.307146
PYG 8605.164438
QAR 4.022748
RON 4.975687
RSD 116.992573
RUB 104.218861
RWF 1495.373254
SAR 4.141014
SBD 9.198553
SCR 14.958307
SDG 663.361377
SEK 11.362669
SGD 1.430328
SHP 0.839878
SLE 25.196926
SLL 23126.003436
SOS 630.745561
SRD 33.973543
STD 22826.567027
SVC 9.657486
SYP 2770.919201
SZL 19.289336
THB 36.536002
TJS 11.742735
TMT 3.859941
TND 3.380524
TOP 2.582965
TRY 37.768956
TTD 7.485726
TWD 35.319888
TZS 3007.034034
UAH 45.454969
UGX 4042.636651
USD 1.10284
UYU 46.232972
UZS 14079.960277
VEF 3995096.826341
VES 40.73781
VND 27289.782557
VUV 130.931413
WST 3.085155
XAF 655.594542
XAG 0.034245
XAU 0.000414
XCD 2.980481
XDR 0.81455
XOF 655.5886
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.096276
ZAR 19.242693
ZMK 9926.89061
ZMW 29.109642
ZWL 355.114118
  • SCS

    -0.2500

    12.62

    -1.98%

  • NGG

    -1.8100

    66.97

    -2.7%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.74

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -1.2400

    138.29

    -0.9%

  • RBGPF

    58.9300

    58.93

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.89

    -0.16%

  • RIO

    -0.9900

    69.83

    -1.42%

  • GSK

    -1.0800

    38.37

    -2.81%

  • BCE

    -0.6000

    33.84

    -1.77%

  • RELX

    -0.6800

    46.61

    -1.46%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.3

    -0.6%

  • AZN

    -1.6500

    77.93

    -2.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.98

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    9.69

    -0.52%

  • BP

    0.0900

    32.46

    +0.28%

  • BTI

    -0.8600

    35.11

    -2.45%

Despite disasters, climate is a taboo election issue in US coal country
Despite disasters, climate is a taboo election issue in US coal country / Photo: Stefani Reynolds - AFP

Despite disasters, climate is a taboo election issue in US coal country

Chase Hays says he is "torn." After seeing floods ravage his hamlet in the mountains of eastern Kentucky, he filed a lawsuit against the mine that overlooks it, but the 34-year-old doesn't want to be seen as an "enemy" of coal.

Text size:

Like him, many in his Appalachian region are reluctant to question an industry that has long provided the only high-paying jobs.

And with the US midterm elections approaching, few candidates dare talk about climate change.

Yet the state has been devastated recently by extreme weather.

In December, tornadoes killed 80 people in western Kentucky, and in late July, unprecedented heavy rains left 40 residents dead in the east of the state.

Standing at the bottom of a remote valley on the banks of a small creek, Hays had never seen water come down so fast.

He barely had time to cut through a fence to escape with his family before the torrent washed away his porch, an above-ground pool, even a pig, and flooded the foundation of his house.

Even if he still cannot live there, he considers himself "one of the lucky ones in my neighborhood," called River Caney, where about 20 houses were destroyed and two women swept away.

Moreover, he was insured, unlike his neighbors, some of whom are still sleeping in tents with no prospect of finding a roof before winter.

On behalf of those neighbors, he filed a complaint against the mining company that extracts coal above the hamlet.

Hays is convinced that one of the company's retaining ponds broke when the rain intensified.

"A big part of the reason why the ponds (were) able to break was they were just blasting way too hard and probably cracked the ponds," he said.

- Climate change and fossil fuels -

But Hays comes from a long line of miners, and is cautious about making generalizations.

"What happened here was the fault of (things) not being maintained and checked on," he said.

About 50 neighbors have joined his lawsuit, including Christy White, a 57-year-old woman whose once well-kept home is now a damp shell.

A grandmother, White finds her voice quivering at mention of the floods.

"Eventually you start bombing and drilling and cutting into the corners, you know, something's gonna happen eventually. It's just common knowledge," she said.

In recent years, mining companies in Appalachia have taken to mountaintop removal, known as strip mining, to gain easier access to coal seams.

Whether strip mining worsens flooding is uncertain, said William Haneberg, the state geologist of Kentucky and director of the Kentucky Geological Survey.

Mountaintop removals "expose a lot of bare rock and remove the trees and the natural vegetation," he said, but the rubble is dumped into the valleys, and flattens terrain "and that might decrease the severity of floods."

He acknowledged a "very strong consensus" among scientists that global warming is driven by the burning of fossil fuels.

"In that way, coal mines do tie into the recent events," he said.

- 'Long-simmering hostility' -

Yet this conclusion is not one shared by many in Kentucky, which has 20 percent of the active coal mines in the United States.

Hays has heard the studies on global warming: "Around here, it's not a nice subject to talk about, just because without coal, this place is dwindling."

Luke Glaser, an independent city councilman in nearby Hazard who has been heavily involved in relief efforts, said that there is "long-simmering hostility towards climate-change initiatives" locally.

"Appalachians... are very proud of the fact that the work they've done has powered the nation over centuries. So it feels like you're not just attacking someone's job but attacking someone's values," Glaser said.

The state, once contested by the two major political parties, has since the 1990s turned overwhelmingly Republican, partly due to energy and environmental issues, said Steve Voss, a political science professor at the University of Kentucky.

More recently, candidates from both parties are careful to "stress that they are friends of coal," although some Democrats are starting to talk about climate, he said.

For locals like Hays, the climate change debate has little effect on elections, even with disastrous flooding.

"We feel forgotten about here," Hays said. "We're just looked down on as uneducated and incapable people."

As for White, an avid fan of former president Donald Trump, her damaged home occupies all her thoughts, and she hasn't pondered the midterm elections at all.

As she sorted through her belongings, she cast doubt on whether global warming had anything to do with the disasters: "I just think it's God's will... God's just trying to get us prepared for what's to come."

(T.Renner--BBZ)