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Coal Pollution Awareness Crusader Visits Montana

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Thursday, March 21, 2013   

MISSOULA, Mont - Coal has long been controversial. It is connected to local economies, the Montana state budget, electricity production and private property rights. A physician who is touring the country wants people to know there is something even bigger: the health impact of coal.

Dr. Alan Lockwood is a former president of Physicians for Social Responsibility and an emeritus professor of neurology and nuclear medicine at the State University of New York. He is in Missoula tonight to present his research on the health effects of coal mining, transportation, burning and disposal.

"Unbeknownst to virtually everyone," Lockwood said, "the coal that we burn is responsible for a huge number of deaths, and serious and minor illnesses, in the United States."

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been slowly requiring more pollution controls on existing coal-burning plants, Lockwood noted, and new plants are required to be fitted with technologies that significantly reduce emissions. In addition, the health impacts of mining, transporting and disposing of coal deserve more focus, he said, in order to protect people.

Lockwood, the author of a book, "The Silent Epidemic: Coal and the Hidden Threat to Health," compared coal industry pollution with smoking. For years, smoking was dismissed as not being a big health risk, but now it is universally recognized as a cause of illness and death, he explained.

"This lack of awareness of the health implications of using coal is pretty much indiscriminately coming to haunt us," Lockwood warned.

Toxins associated with coal use worsen asthma and bronchitis and are directly associated with heart attacks, strokes and lung cancer, he said, adding that if exposure to those toxins were to be noted on death certificates, coal would be a top-10 killer.

Lockwood is scheduled to speak from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. tonight at the Gallagher Business Building, Room 123, University of Montana.



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