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Pike River - the hard coaled facts

Let’s be blunt - it is time to end the coal industry Let’s be blunt - it is time to end the coal industry
Mon, 29 Nov 2010 1:49p.m.

By Nandor Tanczos

The bodies of the Pike River miners haven’t even been recovered yet and the industry PR has begun. Days before John Key’s announcement of a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the disaster, the Chief Executive of the Canterbury Employers Chamber of Commerce was on National Radio talking up the economic benefits of coal mining for the West Coast. On the same day the Grey District Mayor Tony Kokshoorn was saying that business at Pike River needs to continue.  Commendably Pike River Coal itself was more circumspect, saying that the focus for now is the families.

Most New Zealanders would agree. The nation watched alongside the families as the tragedy unfolded. People spoke about it in their lunch rooms and over cups of tea. We waited to hear the outcome, hoping to be able to celebrate some unlikely good news. We felt the shock and sadness of the families at the news of those 29 deaths.  Now our thoughts and prayers are with them as they farewell the departed, those they love who have returned to the Oneness of all things.

There are always lessons to be found in death of course - reminders of how short our time is in this life, how unpredictable the end. I feel for those whose last words to their beloved were harsh and angry, an overspill of some small irritation now made completely irrelevant. I think about the personal legacy each man left, unknown to me, but alive in the hearts of friends and family, of times shared together, of gestures of love, friendship, generosity and solidarity. The stuff that really matters once you are gone.

In one sense, though, these men’s deaths are part of the price paid for coal. Coal mining IS dangerous. There are many things that can be done to manage and mitigate risk but we are deluding ourselves if we think we can have coal without some people dying for it. Just as we are deluding ourselves if we think we can sustain our petroleum addiction by drilling in ever more difficult and dangerous places without suffering more marine catastrophes. Fossil fuel addiction, like P addiction, has little regard for its collateral damage.

The real destruction from continued coal mining, though, will be the deaths it causes outside the mines rather than inside them. As the world meets this week in Cancun to have another go at trying to avert a climatic disaster, there is growing concern about feedback loops such as the methane from thawing Siberian permafrost. The other big concern is the impact that coal is having on the climate – especially as the reality of peak oil hits home.

Conventional oil production is already plateauing and will begin to dwindle.  At the same time increasing demand will push prices up to record highs (prices will be erratic but the trend will be upwards). One of the likely responses will be an increase in the use of tar sands and coal-to-liquid fuel to fill the gap. In fact New Zealand’s own government owned Solid Energy has just such a plan to convert lignite coal to diesel. The world cannot afford to keep burning coal even at our current rate, never mind increasing its use through these mad schemes. At the same time the coal industry’s great hope of Carbon Capture & Storage is being increasingly discredited.  

Let’s be blunt - it is time to end the coal industry. It is important that we properly acknowledge the deaths of the 29 men at Pike River, but in the end there is a bigger question to be decided than mine safety.

Nandor Blog

 

 

Nandor Tanczos, is a social ecologist and rastafarian of Hungarian and Cape Coloured ancestry.

 

He has been a businessman and a beggar, a legislator and an outlaw, and is currently a community educator, freelance writer and orator.

 
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Comments [29]

Drew.K
10/09/2012 9:49:09 a.m.

Way too long make it snappy and short

Lex
27/12/2010 1:44:34 p.m.

Owning Motels you get to talk to a lot of people. Pike River, a mine that mined up for the coal, (most mines go down),so therefore had no natural release for built up gas's. 11 ventilation shafts were wanted at the start, Greens & Doc said no.So this was revised to 4 shafts still the answer was no.In the end they were only permitted one.Political Parties are there to make decisions to help a country grow for its own good. Have the Greens been doing this or should they be told to disban and get out?Some say that by burning coal we will be adding Green House gas's to the atmosphere There are Polymers that can be added to coal to help in its burning so as not to release to much Green House Gas's. Our Country is 15.6 Billion in the Red,China want Hard coking coal of which there is billions of dollars of in Paparoa 2 plus 2

Robina-Lee
7/12/2010 8:04:34 a.m.

Tourisim is our larges INCOME NOW, guests to our country don't want to see our country carved up in unique special areas, our Native birds an species threathened big time. Article in Chch media recently stated that most overseas people can identify with our 100% PURE Image. Govt needs to assist areas with Tourisim more. We don't gain enough from Mining lets get real, so lets diversify. For such a young country we know how to give it away. Tragic yes to loose 29 miners and look forward to report. Big corporate players need to more accountable to the majority of New Zealanders and our visitors. Coal Co's try to sell the high value agriculture top soil of Southland,already mined areas noted to have toxic dust affecting communities with coughing of blood and test identifying mercury etc. Mining Industry isn't known for great employee relationships. New Zealanders are known for inventing but if we each made small steps surely we could show we can look after our resources. Rather than using all our high valued energy and destroyng much in the path. We cetainly aren't looking after our future generations with an attitude of take take. As fellow Farmer we've historically destroyed much Biodiversity and thankyful we woke up to the realisation of balance and respect. (Matagari and Cuttigrass on endangered list). We can't do what we've always done as effects snowball eventually. Us Glenlethnot Farm & Haumuri B&B Retreat Gore. DOC, Dolamore Recreational Park and Solid Energy our Immediate Neighbours. Interested in Mt biking the Hokonuis mid February and view proposed Agricultture distruction from signigficant Ships Cone. Mining 5-10k's from GORE see Moonshine trail ride or Sports Southland web sites. (10K acres purchased so far by just Solid Energy alone not private enterprises).

AaronC
30/11/2010 5:19:49 p.m.

All you people who say this should have been open cast, have failed the intelligence test.

Rick
30/11/2010 4:17:32 p.m.

To those that say it should have been/could have been/should be an open-cast mine: "Pike River Coal chief executive Peter Whittall says open-cast mining at the site was never feasible because of the depth of the coal seam and the terrain ... Even if the mine was not under conservation land, he says, engineering issues would rule out an open-cast operation." (RNZ)

Patrick Morgan
30/11/2010 1:16:28 p.m.

Well said Nandor. I agree. Keep up the good work. The 29 dead is distresing news - but if we don't stop burning coal we risk dangerous climate change that threatens many more. Let's leave the coal in the hole and learn to live in a less carbon-intensive way.

BEN
30/11/2010 11:55:24 a.m.

TO LONG

Sam Buchanan
30/11/2010 10:42:52 a.m.

Nandor didn't start the politicking on this issue - it began with Key defending the company and the regulatory regime saying the mine was safe (when it obviously wasn't) before any investigation had taken place. The line some people seem to be taking is "when Nandor opposes mining, it's political, when Key supports it, it's not". By the way, I don't recall any huge outcry from environmentalists when Pike River was planned, nor do I recall any suggestion of it being open cast. Are anti-environmentalists just making things up?

AndrewF
30/11/2010 8:33:17 a.m.

P*ss off Nandor - don't make this politicial. It should have been an open cast mine.

jen
30/11/2010 8:02:17 a.m.

Its all very well to blame the greenies for not appri=oving of an open cast mine, but in reality it was'nt financially viable to do so. As a miner, of coal and other minerals, the ACCIDENT (because that's just what it was), at Pike River has brought to the fore some absolute ignoramuses, who know nothing about the trepidation felt every day when entering an underground mine, and have less knowledge of mining practises. Nandor, I respect your views, at times a tedious task, but all the tree hugging in the world will not reduce the demand for supply and unless someone with half a brain allows nuclear power into New Zealand Fonterra will always burn lignite and the world will continue to rely on fossil fuels! We call ourselves a nuclear free nation but go into any hospital and find the nuclear technology that is saving lives. It's high time we lost the attitude over the rainbow warrior and got up with the play!

Ron Beveridge
30/11/2010 2:34:05 a.m.

Nandor,at least get your facts right!This is coking coal for steelmaking and not energy coal!It makes me puke when people hop on a band wagon and get their facts hopelessly wrong!!Where is your sensitivity?H

dan
30/11/2010 1:39:00 a.m.

Global warming is "Hoax" that is being spun,the facts thay use are incorrect, youtube global warming hoax and watch. Nandor is using this to push his greeny views.

Ron Beveridge
30/11/2010 1:15:16 a.m.

Nandor,get real!The world cannot meet its energy and industrial requirements without coal!That is without even considering steel production.Coal is the cheapest and more accessible fuel-other than nuclear.All this talk about wind farms and solar heating is "a pimple on a pumpkin!
Talk is cheap!But the reality is that as China and India want the same facilities as we do.Either you go Nuclear-or coal it is as simple as that!There are no other viable alternatives in the near term!We can talk till we are blue in the face-but it will not change reality!

Sandy
29/11/2010 10:54:08 p.m.

Here's an idea, Nandor... How about you mind your own business, and let the people of the coast decide if they want to work in the mine or not? They want to, and who are you to say they can't?

W.Martin
29/11/2010 10:34:09 p.m.

So do you tree huggers support nuclear power plants?The safest cleanest energy on earth. Mann made global warming is dead.Just face it.China WILL burn coal.They desperately need it.Pike River should have always been open cast.Shaun says plenty of other ways for NZ to make serious money.How?I think the hemp may have distorted the thinking of any brain cells he may have had.I bet he still turns his lights on at night.And probably drives a smokey old vw kombie around.Wake up,this is 2010

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