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Wednesday, February 17, 2010 by Will Horter

10 Key Questions for 2010 - Question 3

10 Key Questions for 2010 - Question 3

BC is Canada's biggest coal exporter (Graphic: Coyote Crossing)

Did you ever just wake up one day and know deep down that something important was going to happen to you? That was the way I felt last month at the turn of the New Year. Something deep down told me the first year, of the second decade, of the third millennium, was going to be a pivotal year.

How we, and our political leaders, choose to answer the questions below will shape the kind of world our children will grow up in.

Question 3:

Will the huge expansion of coal mining in BC come under scrutiny in 2010?

Few British Columbians are aware that coal is British Columbia’s largest fossil fuel export at over $5 billion. In 2008, ~26.6 million tonnes of coal was mined in BC, a majority of which was exported to markets abroad mostly in Asia (70%). When burned, or used in making steel, BC coal creates ~65.7 million additional tonnes of CO2 emissions each year, which are not currently counted in the government’s emissions calculation. Including coal virtually doubles BC’s emissions from all other sources.

While other jurisdictions are phasing it out, coal mining is expanding in BC. Currently, there are nine operating coal mines, six proposed coal mines (awaiting environmental assessment approval), one mine (Herman Mine) that received environmental assessment approval in 2008, and five other projects in the very early stages of development.

Coal is becoming the poster child for inaction on global warming. In Australia, the U.S. and Europe coal facilities are increasingly facing blockades and other forms of civil resistance. But so far in BC hardly a peep. That will change in 2010 and coal becomes an increasing focus for activists from around the province. Dogwood initiative will be releasing a report documenting the impacts of existing and proposed coal mining in BC. Perhaps this will inform British Columbians and become a catalyst for action.

Question 1 - Will there be a federal election in 2010?

Question 2 - Which BC party will get a new leader after the Olympics?

Tomorrow's Blog - Question 4:

Will leaders in Capital Region be able to stop reckless development on the Wild Coast and the Saanich Peninsula?

Filed under: ,
Guy Dauncey says:
Feb 18, 2010 02:19 PM
The problem with BC's Coal in particular is that it is metallurgical coal - and it is used to make steel, which we will need among other things to make electric cars and wind turbines.

So we need to find an alternative to that... will the future of steel-making involve hydrogen? Biofuel? Will these provide the very high temperatures that steel-making needs? I've not researched this area yet, but someone needs to..

cheers,
Guy
Will Horter says:
Feb 18, 2010 03:48 PM
Most of BC's coal is being used for steel making, but most steel is not being used for electric cars or windmills, instead most steel is used to support non-essential consumer goods as well as fossil fuel intensive indrustries like tar sands pipelines and mining operations. We need to figure out how to ween ourselves off coal and ensure all the coal that is mined is used to help transition to a post coal society.
Richard says:
Feb 19, 2010 12:08 PM
One million gallons of raw sewage filtered through 10 tons of pulverized coal will produce an effluent that meets regulatory standards. If applied to filter all sewage from Victoria,the spent coal could fuel a 20 Mw power plant that could pump the effluent into an decommissioned hydroelectric reservoir at Jordan River. The power plant could also capture flue gases for sequestration; a percentage of the storage could be reserved for production of electrolytic hydrogen; storage-connected renewables could add more power and water inputs to the system..
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