1 / 22

The Unhealthy Secrets of Coal

The Unhealthy Secrets of Coal. Michele Prevost, MD. Why is Coal Toxic?. Toxic metals Radioactive elements (decays to Radon) Even “low-sulfur” coal produces bio-toxic sulfur and acidifies water Benzene derivatives (carcinogenic). Why is Coal Toxic?.

dore
Download Presentation

The Unhealthy Secrets of Coal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Unhealthy Secrets of Coal Michele Prevost, MD

  2. Why is Coal Toxic? • Toxic metals • Radioactive elements (decays to Radon) • Even “low-sulfur” coal produces bio-toxic sulfur and acidifies water • Benzene derivatives (carcinogenic)

  3. Why is Coal Toxic? • Arsenic – known poison; various cancer & lymphoma • Lead – effects almost every body system • Mercury – Irreversible damage to nervous system • Cadmium – High Blood Pressure; kidney damage • Vanadium – Lung damage; birth defects • Selenium – Cirrhosis (liver failure); pulmonary edema (fluid in lungs); death • Others not as well studied

  4. Adverse Health Effects of Coal A 15 Minute Primer • Coal Mining • Dust • Water • Processing • Transportation • Combustion • Combustion Waste = that electricity is more costly than you think

  5. Coal Dust • PM10 & PM2.5 particles • Black Lung Disease (pneumoconiosis) • Childhood Asthma • Linked to Lymphoma • Greatest impact on young, old & those with other lung or heart disease SEWARD COAL PROBLEMS

  6. Coal and Water • Slurry Ponds • Toxins concentrated • Leach hundreds of years • Old Mine Shafts • Link to ground water contamination • Impoundments • Failures deadly

  7. Coal and Water • Wells exceed drinking water standard >500% • Lack of biodiversity & deformed fish • Stream acidification • Dry ponds = more toxic dust

  8. What if you live down-wind or down-stream? • Common Sense – pollutants that poison make people sick • Growing body of medical studies • Higher rates of premature death, COPD, Lung Cancer, other heart, lung, kidney disease, congenital abnormalities, hospitalizations (after adjusting for other factors) • Environmental degradation linked to depression (and poverty?)

  9. Living Near Coal Mining • Not just occupational injuries & illness • Higher rates of • Cancer – lung, lymphoma • Hospitalization • COPD (Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease) • Hypertension (leads to heart, kidney disease) • Childhood Asthma • Injured by fly rock and trucks

  10. Coal Processing • Chemical wash to prepare for burning • 19 are known cancer-causing agents • Often stored in slurry impoundments • Spills and failures • Contaminated water, injuries, deaths • Dried slurry waste extremely high concentration of toxics – dust

  11. Coal Transportation • The Trains and Trucks • >600,000 NOx • >50,000 tons PM • Along railway much higher than EPA recommended air toxin levels • Numerous coal-truck accidents YES, THAT IS COAL DUST

  12. Coal Combustion • Most well known / studied polluter • Particulates, nitrates, sulfates, mercury • American Lung Association Estimated 24,000 deaths /year directly related • Nitrous Oxide, Sulfur Dioxides → acid rain • Acidification water increases metal leaching into waterways (vicious cycle)

  13. Mercury • #1 source in US – coal fired power plants • Methylmercury builds up in fish, wildlife, then people • Potent neurotoxin • Disrupts fetal development

  14. Mercury • 48 tons emitted 2005 • High amounts in predatory fish • 600,000 infants at risk annually • There is No Safe Level of exposure

  15. Coal Combustion Waste • “Coal Ash” or CCW • 141 million tons annually in US • Kingston Dam Slurry disaster brought attention • Water in area >100x allowable levels toxic heavy metals • Widespread ground water contamination around mines & power plants in lower 48

  16. Coal Ash - Alaska • USGS & Independent Testing of Soils in Fairbanks: • Arsenic • Vanadium • Lead • Mercury Mercury

  17. Coal Ash - Arsenic • Primary threat to human health? • >100x allowable soil levels in AK tests • EPA: 2000x increased cancer risk living @ coal ash ponds

  18. Conclusion • Once soils / water contaminated, may be for centuries • Cumulative public health impacts of coal extensive • Our dependence on coal not sustainable • Move beyond the industrial revolution – need a future without coal

  19. QUESTIONS?

  20. References • Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR); Research on the Health impacts of coal-related pollutants; 2009. • Aneja, Viney; Characterization of Particulate Matter (PM10) in Roda, Virginia, Raleigh 2009 • Brabin B; Respiratory morbidity in Merssyside schoolchildren exposed to coal dust and air pollution. Archives of Disease in Childhood 70; 1994; 305-312 • Epstein P; Testimony for the Kentucky General Assembly House of Representatives Committee on Health and Welfare; Feb 2010. • Epstein P, et al; Full Cost Accounting for the Life Cycle of Coal; Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences; 1219, 2011; 73-98 • Goodell J; Big Coal; The Dirty Secret Behind America’s Energy Future; First Mariner Books; 2007

  21. References • Hendryx M, et al. Hospitalization patterns associated with Appalachian coal mining; Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health; 2007; 70; 2064-70 • Hendryx M, Ahern MM; Relations between health indicators and residential proximity to coal mining in West Virginia; American Journal of Public Health; 2008; 98; 669-71 • Hendryx, et al.; Lung Cancer Mortality is Elevated in Coal Mine Areas of Appalachia; Lung Cancer; 2008; 62; 1-7 • National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH); Registry of toxic effects of chemical substances: Coal, ground bituminous; Cincinnati, OH; Centers for Disease Control; 1991. • NSW Health; Mine Dust and You; http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/factsheets/environmental/mine _dust.html

More Related