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Coal has Contaminated Every Fish in America with Mercury

Photo: Bugeaters/Flickr
Photo: Bugeaters/Flickr

You read that right. Mercury has been found in every fish tested from almost 300 streams over a 7-year period. Where is it coming from? Coal.

Here’s a pretty terrifying statistic: 100 percent of the fish tested by the U.S. Geological Survey in nearly 300 streams were found to be contaminated with mercury.
 
Every single one.
 
Between 1998 and 2005 scientists tested over 1,000 fish from 291 streams across the country and found mercury in all of them. A quarter of the fish had more than the EPA thinks is safe for people to eat.
 
We can thank coal for this one. Mercury is found in coal and is released from power plant smoke stacks into the air. It eventually comes back down to earth in rain and other precipitation and travels through the food chain to collect in the fatty tissues of, apparently, every fish living in the United States (and any person eating those fish).
 
How do you like them apples?
 
Coal is the enemy of mankind and looks to be no good friend of fish either. We need to stop burning it post-haste.
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Live near coal ash?   1 in 50 chance of cancer.
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The Bush Administration buried a report showing a highly elevated risk of cancer for those living near coal ash. Why do we burn coal again?
Putting aside the argument over whether CO2 causes climate change, coal is a terribly destructive way to create energy and we need to stop burning it.
 
First you have to dig coal up. We either sink tunnels thousands of feet into the ground, putting the lives of millions of men around the world in constant risk or we rip down entire mountain ranges get at it, burying valleys and streams with the rubble.
 
Then we haul it all around the country to power plants where it’s burned, releasing toxins like mercury, arsenic, and lead into the air.
 
And then, just when you think the damage party is over, we’re left with an inordinate amount of coal ash after the burn. We create enough coal ash to fill a million railroad cars a year. Coal ash isn’t regulated by the federal government so the country is a patchwork of different regulations, some weaker than others, many completely ineffectual. Often the coal ash is left in unlined open air slurry ponds, ponds which can and have leaked and burst.
 
In December Tennessee was the epicenter for one of the worst environmental disasters in our nations history when over a billion gallons of coal ash burst from a TVA storage pond in the small town of Harriman. Dozens of houses were destroyed, the land was covered in up to six feet of toxic sludge, and water sources have been contaminated by mercury, lead, and other toxic heavy metals.
 
Even when coal ponds behave and don’t burst through their levees, the people living near them are way more likely to get cancer. The Bush Administration buried a report by the EPA that came out in 2002 that found that people living near coal ash ponds had a 1 in 50 risk of developing cancer.
 
Throw another outrageous criminal act by the Bush Administration onto their pile of shame.
 
We need to stop burning coal as fast as humanly possible. We put a guy on the moon, we created the Internet, and invented the Wii. We can certainly stop burning coal within the next decade or two.
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Written by Shea Gunther, Reprinted from mnn.com
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