Environmental Effects of Coal Burning

There are a number of adverse health and environmental effects of coal burning especially in power stations, and of coal mining. These effects include:

●        Coal-fired power plants shorten nearly 24,000 lives a year in the United States, including 2,800 from lung cancer

●        Generation of hundreds of millions of tons of waste products, including fly ash, bottom ash, flue gas desulfurization sludge, that contain mercury, uranium, thorium, arsenic, and other heavy metals

●        Acid rain from high sulfur coal

●        Interference with groundwater and water table levels

●        Contamination of land and waterways and destruction of homes from fly ash spills such as Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill

●        Impact of water use on flows of rivers and consequential impact on other land-uses

●        Dust nuisance

●        Subsidence above tunnels, sometimes damaging infrastructure

●        Uncontrollable underground fires which may burn for decades or centuries.

●        Coal-fired power plants without effective fly ash capture are one of the largest sources of human-caused background radiation exposure

●        Coal-fired power plants emit mercury, selenium, and arsenic which are harmful to human health and the environment

●        Release of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, which causes climate change and global warming according to the IPCC and the EPA. Coal is the largest contributor to the human-made increase of CO2 in the air

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