Pulp Fiction
http://reports.climatecentral.org/pulp-fiction/1/
ELBY, U.K. - The heavy power lines and narrow roads between the steam-billowing towers of three of Englands biggest power plants traverse an energy industry in upheaval. Shuttered coal mines are flanked by emerald pastures. Towering wind turbines and solar arrays have taken root in windblown cereal fields.
In the middle of the transition is the Drax Power Station Western Europes largest coal power plant, as big and powerful as many nuclear stations. The 4-gigawatt facility was built in the 1970s and 80s in this bucolic Yorkshire parish to burn the fruits of a local coal-mining boom. Droves of miners arrived in double-decker bus loads at a region known as Megawatt Valley.
We used to sit on the doorstep me and the kids singing, Hi ho, hi ho, said Pamela Ross, a former mine administrative worker and union rep. In the dining room of a converted farmhouse between castle remnants and two village thoroughfares, where she has lived since 1988, she rifled through yellowing government documents and photos of mine groundbreakings, lamenting the wheezing of what once was a strapping local industry. We have hundreds of years of coal still underground, she said. But its likely to stay there.
Nostalgia about the coal sectors misfortune is far from universal. The cheap black rock that powered the Industrial Revolution is the dirtiest of the fossil fuels. As the world cracks down on climate pollution and deadly air pollution, its scrambling to deploy cleaner energy alternatives. The European Union has led the world in passing stringent climate laws and urging the rest of the world to follow.