Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama may be proposing cap-and-trade schemes
designed to cut emissions by 80 per cent by 2050, but that has not stopped the
two Democratic presidential candidates signalling their support for clean coal
technologies this week, as they attempt to woo voters in coal-rich states.
According to Reuters' reports, Clinton told a rally in Clear Fork,
West Virginia that she would support "some big investments" in carbon capture
and storage technologies.
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Her comments followed a speech last week at the state's capitol rotunda in
Charleston where she said she understood how important coal was to West
Virginia, adding that "Coal is not going anywhere for the foreseeable future".
Meanwhile, Presidential frontrunner Barack Obama also signalled his support
for clean coal technologies, distributing flyers across Kentucky stating that "
Barack Obama believes in clean Kentucky coal".
Observers said that the moves represented an attempt to woo voters in two
states where the coal industry employs around 39,000 people.
However, environmentalists slammed the move, noting that in a week when both
Democratic candidates had
criticised
rival presidential nominee John McCain for not going far enough with his
strategy for cutting emission by 60 per cent by 2050, Obama and Clinton were
voicing support for an untested technology which many green groups argue is
undermining investment in renewable energy.
"There is no such animal as clean coal," Brent Blackwelder, president of the
environmental group Friends of the Earth, told Reuters. "We shouldn't be placing
our bets on coal to bail us out. We need to be looking at getting rid of coal
plants."
However, the move is likely to be welcomed by many within the coal industry
who have seen clean coal technologies emerge as a central plank in the Bush
administration's climate change strategy, and are keen to see investment in the
sector continue.
The White House has ploughed hundreds of millions of dollars into a series of
demonstration projects designed to prove the viability of the technology. Only
last month the
Department
of Energy pledged to invest a further $126m in two projects to test the
viability of geological formations as potential carbon sinks.
Advocates of the technology maintain it would allow the US to continue to tap
into its 250 years worth of coal reserves, while still curbing carbon emissions.
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