Mining the Mountains
Explosives and giant machines are destroying Appalachian peaks to obtain coal. In a tiny West Virginia town, residents and the industry fight over a mountain's fate
- By John McQuaid
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2009, Subscribe
Mountain operations, like the Hobet 21 mine near Danville, West Virginia, yield one ton of coal for every 16 tons of terrain displaced. Paul Corbit Brown
Editor's Note -- On April 1, 2010, the Environmental Protection Agency released new guidelines on mountaintop mining. For more on this update, check out our Surprising Science blog.
For most of its route through the hardscrabble towns of West Virginia's central Appalachian highlands, U.S. Highway 60 follows riverbanks and valleys. But as it approaches Gauley Mountain, it swoops dramatically upward, making switchbacks over steep wooded ridges. It goes by the Mystery Hole, a kitschy tourist stop that claims to defy the law of gravity. Then the road abruptly straightens and you're in Ansted, a town of about 1,600 people. There's an auto dealership, an Episcopal church and a Tudor's Biscuit World restaurant. A historical marker notes that Stonewall Jackson's mother is buried in the local cemetery, and there's a preserved antebellum mansion called Contentment.
The tranquillity belies Ansted's rough-and-tumble history as a coal town—and the conflict now dividing its townspeople. Founded as a mining camp in the 1870s by English geologist David T. Ansted, the first person to discover coal in the surrounding mountains, it played an important part in the Appalachian coal economy for nearly a century. The coal baron William Nelson Page made Ansted his headquarters. You get a feeling for the old connection to coal in the one-room town museum behind the storefront that serves as the town's city hall, with its vintage mining helmets and pickaxes, company scrip and photographs of dust-covered miners. But beginning in the 1950s, the boom ended, and one by one the mine shafts closed, leaving most of the local populace feeling bitter and abandoned.
"They burned the buildings down and left the area," Mayor R. A. "Pete" Hobbs recalled of the coal companies' abrupt departure. "Unemployment when I graduated high school"—in 1961—"was 27 percent."
Now coal is back, with a different approach: demolishing mountains instead of drilling into them, a method known as mountaintop coal removal. One project is dismantling the backside of Gauley Mountain, the town's signature topographical feature, methodically blasting it apart layer by layer and trucking off the coal to generate electricity and forge steel. Gauley is fast becoming a kind of Potemkin peak—whole on one side, hollowed out on the other. Some Ansted residents support the project, but in a twist of local history, many people, former miners included, oppose it, making the town an improbable battleground in the struggle to meet the nation's rising energy needs.
Since the mid-1990s, coal companies have pulverized Appalachian mountaintops in West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee. Peaks formed hundreds of millions of years ago are obliterated in months. Forests that survived the last ice age are chopped down and burned. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that by 2012, two decades of mountaintop removal will have destroyed or degraded 11.5 percent of the forests in those four states, an area larger than Delaware. Rubble and waste will have buried more than 1,000 miles of streams.
This is devastation on an astonishing scale, and though many of us would like to distance ourselves from it, blaming it on others' callousness or excesses, mountaintop coal removal feeds the global energy economy in which we all participate. Even as I was writing this article at home in suburban Washington, D.C., it occurred to me that the glowing letters on my laptop might be traceable to mountaintop removal. An EPA Web site indicates that utlities serving my ZIP code get 48 percent of their power from coal—as it happens, the same portion of coal-generated electricity nationwide. In fact, the environmental group Appalachian Voices produced a map indicating 11 direct connections between West Virginia mountaintop coal sources and electric power plants in my area, the closest being the Potomac River Generating Station in Alexandria, Virginia. So coal torn from a West Virginia mountain was put on a truck and then a rail car, which took it to Alexandria, where it was incinerated, creating the heat that drove the turbines that generated the electricity that enabled me to document concerns about the destruction of that very same American landscape.
Demand for mountaintop coal has been rising quickly, driven by high oil prices, energy-intensive lifestyles in the United States and elsewhere and hungry economies in China and India. The price of central Appalachian coal has nearly tripled since 2006 (the long-term effect on coal pricing of the latest global economic downturn isn't yet known). U.S. coal exports increased by 19 percent in 2007 and were expected to go up by 43 percent in 2008. Virginia-based Massey Energy, responsible for many of Appalachia's mountaintop projects, recently announced plans to sell more coal to China. As demand increases, so does mountaintop removal, the most efficient and most profitable form of coal mining. In West Virginia, mountaintop removal and other kinds of surface mining (including highwall mining, in which machines demolish mountainsides but leave peaks intact) accounted for about 42 percent of all coal extracted in 2007, up from 31 percent a decade earlier.
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Related topics: Environmental Preservation Mining Mid Atlantic Mountains
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Comments (61)
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Make the mine companys replace the trees and mountain tops that they tear down, after the coal is removed,
Posted by B Johnson on February 8,2012 | 12:14 PM
ok people you need to look at it this 50% of the united states come from right here in west virginia i no it aint great but if you take out coal mining you might as well take out 50%+ jobs and the last coal miner out of west virgina might as well turn off the lights
Posted by Shannon Jarrell on January 24,2012 | 08:06 PM
The mine only covers about 16 square miles... still bad but its not 80.
Posted by Mitchell Jones on December 11,2011 | 04:38 PM
I THINK THEY SHOULD STOP IT RIGHT NOW BEFORE IT GOES ANY FARTHER!
Posted by Brooklynn paige on February 17,2011 | 10:22 AM
why are there no Pictures of Tunnel Ridge Coal Company, Wheeling West Va? Tried to find on internet, no go!
Posted by john on October 15,2010 | 10:47 PM
Good article. Thank you for writing it. We the American people need to be informed. The word needs to go out. I'm renewing my Smithsonian Mag. subscription on account of this article. Good solid journalism.
I'm not from West VA. but I'm an American, and this is happening here in America. I wrote letters to my congresswoman, senators and president, and others, hoping someone would listen. I vacationed their when I was a kid, many years ago. its beautiful. Makes me want to weep.
We are so wasteful and so stupid when it comes to Energy.
Is this really 2009? What happen to innovation? we should be done with Coal and Oil by now.
Posted by Cowboy on June 21,2009 | 04:55 PM
Thanks for a fine article. Can't help but wonder who wrote the description in the magazine's table of contents, which passed this off as enviros "screaming and yelling" while coal companies go about their business. Credible scientific sources are providing lots of information about the true cost of coal-fired power, from the time a mountain top is blown up through dumping into streams, release of toxins and CO2 while burning (about half the soot - PM 2.5 - in the US, and single largest point source of mercury in our air and water), through the dumps that sometimes break and flood surrounding areas. Would also note that the wind power industry now employs more people than the 82,000 who mine coal in the US. And we still have to source about 60% of the parts for wind turbines in Europe, because we don't make them in the US. Time for a change.
If we use the conservation and energy efficiency now available, we can stop building coal-fired power plants right now.
Posted by Diana Christopulos on April 20,2009 | 05:54 PM
To the author and everyone else who is horrified by this article: If you have your electricity disconnected, you won't be a hypocrite!
Posted by JD on April 10,2009 | 01:25 PM
Who gets the blame? Who gets the blame for MTR? Do the profiteering coal companies get it? Do the greasy politicians (Governors, Senators, Congressman included)get it? Who gets the blame? I say we do. We the people are responsible for letting this happen and we the people can stop it from happening some more. MTR Coal accounts for just 5% of our coal. We can acheive 20%+ efficiencies in the way we use electricity. States like WV and KY can attract higher paying jobs that don't destroy their precious assets (the mountains). We can vote the crooked politicians out of office. We get the blame.
Posted by CBL on April 10,2009 | 09:22 AM
I spent all the summers of my childhood in Ansted. I stood in front of the "Company Store" the night it closed for good. I saw the mine desert the town. I saw that a lot of people got cancer in that area. I always wondered why. This type of mining will one day close down and desert the state. The jobs will be gone forever. And there will be no more shadows on the land. The shadows will be in our hearts. We who remember the mountains.
Posted by anne ferraro on April 8,2009 | 10:19 AM
This kind of destruction is just a bad idea. To those who say it helps the WV economy: it will, for about 20 more years, then there won't be any mountains, and WV will look closer to the surface of the moon or mars than earth, so good luck getting any money into the state at all. It is a terrible precident. If people get away with it now they will be able to get away with in the future, or at least thats the theory, and the world cant take this, it will pollute every single river, cloud, steam, lake, ocean, etc in existence, and remove to much of the worlds forest for recovery.
This is goign to continue until it is forced to stop, and by then there won't be any coal left (and ps: coal reserves wont last any longer than oil, or at least, not much longer)thats within my lifetime... i have no plans of watching the entire world crumble as all our sources of energy crumble away and the world as we know it dies...
We need the Earth, it doesn't need us, lets just hope we are smart enough to figure out a better solution, MTR is jsut horrific, and yet no one seems willing to stop it, but then thats been the history of the human race so far, and look at where its gotten us: oil due to run out in 50 years, global warming, economic turmoil because of profiteers not following the rules of common sense (this caused the great depression, and the current crisis, and probally msot others as well), and overall degrading of the planet, no we aren't living in a way we can continue to and hope to survive, i hope we learn before it is too late...
Posted by Chris Paquette on April 5,2009 | 08:13 PM
mountain top removal is terrible for the enviroment and ruins the wild life and places that people I beleive wew should stop mountain top removal before we ruin all the beautiful mountains we have!
Posted by mne on April 1,2009 | 02:36 PM
this was really helpful for the research report im doing for english...so thanks!:)
Posted by Liz on March 22,2009 | 01:33 PM
MTR does not increase jobs; in fact, because it is largely dependent on huge machines rather than actual workers, it has the opposite effect. The answer is to increase the number of green jobs in these areas. Like the clear-cutting in the Pacific Northwest, MTR is unsustainable. What happens when all the mountains are destroyed? Where will those "jobs" be then? MTR, like clear-cutting, besides destroying streams and our natural legacy, is a recipe for disaster.
Posted by Janet Ward on March 8,2009 | 01:35 PM
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