Navajo and Hopi Nations Remain Locked in an Old Energy Dance with Peabody Energy
In their homes, the Navajo and Hopi 
often burn coal for heat, which leads to a  prevalence of respiratory 
illness. With coal at an average price of $90/ton,  it would take $875 
worth of wood to obtain the same amount of heat. With  electrical 
transmission lines absent over much of the reservation, electrical 
heating  is not an option. Even if available, electricity would cost far
 more than coal,  wood or sparsely available propane.
 The artist  Jetsonorama lives in  Inscription House, in northeastern Arizona.  There he is the only permanent physician at the Indian Health Service's   Inscription House Health Center.  Although not a Native American, his  wheat-paste photo murals periodically appear  on crumbling or abandoned walls throughout the  Navajo Reservation. Several years  ago, at the ruin of the  Cow Springs Trading Post, multiple copies of the  artist’s work appeared.
The artist  Jetsonorama lives in  Inscription House, in northeastern Arizona.  There he is the only permanent physician at the Indian Health Service's   Inscription House Health Center.  Although not a Native American, his  wheat-paste photo murals periodically appear  on crumbling or abandoned walls throughout the  Navajo Reservation. Several years  ago, at the ruin of the  Cow Springs Trading Post, multiple copies of the  artist’s work appeared. 
A memorable series of Jetsonorama’s posters featured a beautiful Navajo 
baby.  Shown with a large lump of coal looming over its head, the Navajo
 baby  represents Jetsonorama's message that energy from coal 
contributes to climate  change. At the time, he called it, "a metaphorical black cloud over the head of  future generations, if we keep burning fossil fuels."
As part of the agreement between Peabody Energy and the Navajo Nation, the  Black  Mesa Complex
 is obligated to provide free coal to any local Native American  family.
 In the fall and winter, when residents seek coal for their stoves,  
trucks and trailers often clog the road up to Black Mesa. Fully 
twenty-five percent  of residential coal stoves on the Navajo 
Reservation began life burning  something other than coal.  Free coal or
 not, unacceptable levels of smoke and ash often enter the living areas 
 of coal-heated homes.
With its three 775 ft. tall flue gas stacks sending coal smoke into the 
upper  atmosphere, local residents may not notice emissions emanating 
from Navajo  Generating Station (NGS). The heat  island effect created 
by NGS keeps a near-permanent updraft operating in the  immediate area. 
Depending on the prevailing
 winds, however, NGS coal smoke and  its nitrous oxide haze may settle 
near or far, anywhere in Four Corner Region. In summer, coal smoke from 
NGS and other Arizona coal-fired plants  affects cities as far away as  Durango, Colorado.
The burning of coal near ground-level is more detrimental to the  health
 of local residents than the NGS stack emissions. Burning  slowly, but 
continuously over the winter months, each  residential coal stove
 is  a constant source of air and water pollution. It takes relatively 
few  inefficient coal stoves to affect an entire community. In winter, 
when the air  is often cold and still, residential  coal smoke pools near its source.
  Thus, residents of places like Cow Springs, which sits in a depression
 midway between Black Mesa  and NGS, may experience both residential and
 NGS coal smoke.
I have a proposal for Peabody Energy and its partners,  the Navajo Tribal Energy Authority (NTUA),  NGS and the Salt  River Project (SRP), which owns  the Central Arizona Project (CAP).
 Instead of removing all  outward signs of Peabody  Energy’s existence 
from the Navajo Reservation, the coal mining company and its partners  
should provide relief to the Navajo who need and deserve it most.
At a minimum,  the utility consortium should provide pollution controls 
for any residential  coal-burning stove from Kayenta to LeChee. If no 
such emission-controlled stoves  are  available, the consortium should 
provide propane-heating systems to 
all current  coal-burning families. Although they deny it, Peabody 
Energy has a record of misuse and  abuse of the  Navajo Nation and its 
resources. To make up for their excesses, providing subsidized, clean 
heat  and electricity to several thousand  Navajo families is the least 
that they can do.
When
 writing about coal, water and the Southwest, it is easy to become 
morose  and believe nothing in our fossil-fueled political environment 
will ever change.  However, there is some good news. According to a 
recent  Los Angeles Times  article, college students from all over the 
U.S. are raising their consciousness  regarding the effects of fossil 
fuels. In one college or university after  another, groups and 
individuals now step forward to assert their power. Students  who have 
never seen a coal plant or choked on coal smoke realize that their  
actions can make a difference to all who breathe.
Student campaigns such as “Fossil Free UC” have made their mark on policy.  Recently, the fundraising foundation for  San Francisco State University
  committed to selling stocks and bonds of companies with significant 
coal and tar  sands holdings. If all three hundred colleges and 
universities targeted by the  “fossil free” advocates join in, the true 
cost of coal mining and coal burning would  become obvious. As our 
collective investment in  Old Energy wanes, that capital  can migrate to development and construction of  new energy alternatives. 
The Navajo and Hopi reservations exist within a desert region. Why not use  home-based solar
 on the reservation to decrease dependency on coal fire? If  every 
Navajo home were to feed power back into the electrical grid, "reverse  carbon credits"
 could allow cleaner  propane heating to replace residential coal 
stoves. The result would be a  construction boom unlike any ever seen in
 the Four Corners Region.
No worker ever contracted black lung disease while installing solar 
panels or a propane heating  system. With excess energy flowing back 
into the grid, NGS could power-down to  a lower level. As a result, we 
could save Navajo and Hopi land, water and air  resources for the use of
 future generations. 
This is Chapter 4 of a four-part series regarding coal and water in the  Southwest. To return to Chapter 1, please click  HERE.
By James McGillis at 12:56 PM | Environment | Comments (0) | Link

 
 
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