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By JIM GENARO
Representatives of several local environmental groups gathered at Pritchard Park in downtown Asheville last Sunday to launch an electricity boycott in protest of plans for two new coal-fueled power generators.
Despite temperatures as low as 10 degrees, about 30 people turned out, carrying LED candles in a symbolic “candlelight” vigil to protest Duke Energy’s plans to build two new units at its Cliffside power plant in Rutherford County.
Organizers of the event called for citizens to turn off their
electricity for 15 minutes at 9 p.m. every Sunday and place
battery-powered LED candles in their windows.
The Canary Coalition and other groups charge that the new smokestacks
will spew toxic mercury into the air and contribute to global warming.
However, Duke argues that the extensive emissions controls will ensure
that the facility will be among the cleanest in the nation, and that
the two new state-of-the-art generators will allow the company to
retire four older units. Duke currently is awaiting approval from the
N.C. Division of Air Quality.
Canary Coalition Executive Director Avram Friedman said in a telephone
interview with the Daily Planet last Tuesday that the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has urged the air-quality board to
delay a decision pending further research.
Specifically, he said, the EPA has concerns about the effects the new
smokestacks could have on mercury levels and on the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park.
Friedman said a decision from the DAQ is expected soon.
In addition to turning off their electricity for 15 minutes every
sunday, boycott organizers are urging participants to “divest from
corporations, banks and other lending institutions that have major
investments in new coal and nuclear plants.”
The organizations supporting the boycott include the Canary Coalition,
Mountain Voices Alliance, Nuclear Information and Resource Service,
Carolinas Clean Air Coalition, N.C. Interfaith Power & Light and
Physicians for Social Responsibility.
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