I am troubled by the response from some of our legislative leaders and others who seem to passively accept that coal is an industry in decline and further espouse a defeatist attitude and contempt toward one of the state’s leading industries and the thousands of men and woman who comprise it.
This was the message delivered in an Associated Press story that made the rounds recently, entitled, “Legislative leaders say coal rhetoric not helping.”
This attitude that additional gains in our economy must carry trade-offs or losses in other aspects of our economy is emblematic of the zero-sum mentality that has plagued West Virginia’s economic development efforts for decades.
We have heard for years that the “greening of America” or increase in renewable energy sources will provide ample job opportunities to coal miners who have been laid off.
Those jobs never materialized, but we are hearing similar refrains today as it relates to our growing gas industry and the potential of providing job opportunities for our state’s 5,000 furloughed miners.
Jobs in West Virginia’s oil/gas industry are an incredible boon to our state, but that industry’s workforce never will be able to accommodate the thousands of miners’ whose jobs are in limbo.
Why do our leaders assume we can trade one coal mining job for one in another industry? And why does West Virginia only worry about the security of miners’ jobs when WARN notices are issued?
Our miners are taken for granted every day by those who assume the lights will turn on when they flip the switch and don’t realize that coal is the reason they can afford their electric bills.
If green jobs are available let’s have them, and as natural gas continues its path toward becoming a major economic force for our state, we applaud this progression. Let me be clear – the coal industry fully embraces this development, but progress in one sector of our economy should not mean a coal miner’s job shouldn’t be saved.
West Virginia is THE Energy State. We are a major energy exporter domestically and internationally. We should be able to sustain our current level of coal production and expand our natural gas industries and renewable output. We should not be working to expand growth in one energy source and write off the other as a “shadow of what it once was”.
Yes, West Virginia’s coal output has fallen from record highs just a few years ago. However, we are still the second-highest coal-producing state in the nation. The U.S. Energy Information Administration confirms that coal is also the second-largest energy source worldwide, and global consumption is expected to grow for at least another 25 years.
Regardless of what some in our state may think about coal’s future, global projections remain bullish on this inexpensive fossil fuel.
While we expected coal adversaries to try to accelerate our industry’s demise, we did not expect our legislative leaders to join in that chorus. We expect them to be more innovative and eager to seek solutions to the obstacles that inhibit broad-spectrum development of our state energy resources.
The premise is simple: West Virginia has more coal reserves than most other states, and world usage is growing.
Typically, this would sound all the marketing bells and whistles – “what a great scenario and opportunity for the Energy State”.
The United States will continue to use coal. Nothing can replace 40 percent of U.S. electric generating capacity. The primary question before us is not whether coal will be used throughout our country and the world, but where it will come from and who will benefit from its production.
Several major coal-producing regions such as the Powder River and Illinois basins are on the increase, and foreign-sourced coal from countries like Indonesia, Columbia and even Russia is finding its way into the United States.
West Virginia should do far more than it has in the past to explore ways to foster and encourage greater coal production and combustion. It is not acceptable to simply dismiss West Virginia’s coal industry by wondering “whether coal is ever coming back.”
News flash: Coal never left West Virginia. It may not be booming right now, but it’s still making a dramatic contribution to our state coffers. It’s here, ready and waiting for leaders to step forward and make the most of it, not relegate it to second-class status.
We have a hard enough time battling a federal government that wants to regulate us out of existence, as though promises and dreams will power America and produce steel. For any state political leader to write off the industry’s future is extremely short-sighted.
We have many opportunities at the state level to boost the coal industry and help it maintain its viability in domestic and world markets. Let’s begin with a realistic evaluation of our coal reserves, markets and future opportunities, and not merely opinion from unqualified voices.