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Group Urges Interior Dept. to Keep Coal in the Ground

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Tuesday, August 11, 2015   

DENVER – WildEarth Guardians, an organization that has successfully challenged Colorado coal production in court, has released a roadmap for slowing climate change by transitioning to cleaner energy.

Jeremy Nichols, the group's program director, says if the U.S. is to meet climate targets, over 90 percent of the nation's coal reserves can't be burned. He plans to present the report's findings next week at a U.S. Interior Department hearing on national coal policy on public lands.

"We see the only way to make that happen is for them to deliberately, but thoughtfully, ween our nation off of coal," he says. "Ultimately we get to a point where they are keeping our coal in the ground."

According to Nichols, the Interior Department oversees nearly one trillion tons of publicly-owned coal reserves. In 2014 more than 40 percent of all coal produced in the U.S. was mined from public lands.

Industry groups argue that cutting coal production would threaten the nation's energy security, remove revenue streams for federal and local governments, and lead to job losses.

The primary focus of the hearings is royalties paid for using public lands, but the Interior Department says it's open to discussing ways to make the coal program consistent with climate objectives. The agency has been asked, even in court, to account for the potential climate effects of coal taken from public land. Nichols says the department could take the lead in a national transition away from coal.

"Helping workers find new and equally prosperous but sustainable jobs," says Nichols. "This agency can play a very important role in making that happen, but they've got to start being honest with the American public."

WildEarth Guardians is among the groups that successfully petitioned a U.S. District Court in Colorado last year to cancel a federal coal lease, citing failure to consider climate impacts. Earlier this year, the group enjoyed similar results when it challenged the expansion of coal mines near Craig in Moffat County.


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