U.S. Senator Joe Manchin is
frustrated with the Obama administration.
The senator said the President
Obama and the federal Environmental Protection Agency refuse to acknowledge any
policy which involves coal as a long-term energy source for the country. He’s
worried they are playing a dangerous game.
“They believe they can do an energy
policy for the United States
without fossil and that’s not accurate and not true,” Manchin said during a
visit last week in Mercer
County . “They are a
greater denier there than anybody else who’s denying we have a climate
problem.”
Manchin’s remarks came amid the
announcement of Coal River Energy’s decision to shut down its operations in
Kanawha, Boone, and Lincoln counties. It’s the latest in a long list of WARN
notices in 2014 at mines throughout West
Virginia and the Appalachian region.
“They won’t stop, they keep coming
and that’s what’s horrible,” Manchin said. “When utility companies start making
changes and retrofitting to gas, those are long-term changes. The big
problem we are going to have in this country is reliability.”
Manchin said he’s attempted to
communicate what he believed were the direct circumstances of ostracizing coal
from the nation’s energy makeup. He said he can make no traction with his
concerns at the White House.
“There is still going to be a need
for coal in the United
States of America . I know it’s very
difficult for this administration to acknowledge that.” Manchin told MetroNews.
“The big problem we’re going to have in this country is reliability. It’s
Russian roulette they are playing here and the ones who get hurt the most are
the elderly, the fixed income, and the poor. I’m afraid you’re going to
have a lot of people’s lives in jeopardy if we don’t get an energy policy which
includes coal in this country.”
Manchin said before operators
decide to shutdown an operation, he’d like to see each operation reevaluated.
He said the best example was a decision by Cliff’s Natural Resources. A
management change at the top of the corporate structure resulted in the
reversal of plans to close the Pinnacle Mine in Wyoming County .
Manchin said he wanted to see more fair and honest evaluations of operations to
see if other reversals could occur.
“There’s a demand for coal around the world,” he said. “There’s
still going to be a need for coal in the United States of America .”