Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersCoal not candles

Coal not candles

Earth Hour should celebrate coal, not candles.
It was coal that produced clean electric power which cleared the smog produced by dirty combustion and open fires in big cities like London and Pittsburgh. Much of the third world still suffers choking fumes and smog because they do not have clean electric power and burn wood, cardboard, unwashed coal and cow dung for home heat.
It was coal that saved the forests being felled to fuel the first steam engines and produce charcoal for the first iron smelters.
It was coal that powered the light bulbs and saved the whales being slaughtered for whale oil lamps.
It was coal that produced the steel that replaced shingles on the roof, timber props in the mines, wooden fence posts on the farms and the bark on the old bark hut.
In Australia today, coal provides at least 75 per cent of our lighting, cooking, heating, refrigeration, rail transport and steel. Without it, we would be back in the dark days of candles, wood stoves, chip heaters, open fires, smoky cities, hills bare of trees and streets knee deep in horse manure.
Coal is fossil sunshine as clean as the green plants it came from, and less damaging to the environment than its green energy alternatives.
Earth Hour candles are green tokenism for rich applause-seekers and nostalgic dreamers.
We should spend Earth Hour saluting the real people who produce the coal on which most people on earth depend.

Viv Forbes

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Warwick hosts top Queensland league action

The Western Clydesdales will take on the Townsville Black Hawks when Host Plus Queensland Cup action comes to Warwick’s Father Ranger Oval on Sunday...
More News

Full house for Gremlins juniors

It will be all hands-on deck as the Stanthorpe Gremlins Rugby League Club juniors take to the field on both Sullivan and Crisp Oval....

Cox Bridge scheduled for major makeover

The popular Cox Bridge on Victoria Street is getting a complete overhaul, aiming to fix the frequent traffic disruptions caused by flooding due to...

Women’s day with a difference for Water Rats

It will be Ladies Day on and off the field at Risdon Oval on Saturday as the Warwick Water Rats women hold their home...

Will the Federal Budget ease the regional squeeze?

As the Federal Budget night on Tuesday, 12 May, creeps closer, and cost-of-living pressures across the country continue to tighten, many economists and locals...

Brave Wieambilla shooting heroes formally recognised

Deadly scenes at a rural bush block in Queensland’s Western Downs region more than three years ago sent shockwaves around the country. Police officers were...

The key to winning

S Vul: E/W NORTH ♠ J5 ♥ AKQJ3 ♦ J9654 ♣ K WEST EAST ♠ AKQ986 ♠ 10542 ♥ 76 ♥ -- ♦ A ♦ KQ10873 ♣ J876 ♣ A54 SOUTH ♠ 7 ♥ 1098542 ♦ 2 ♣ Q10952 Bridge...

Big start to season for Warwick Kart Club

Warwick Kart drivers are gearing up for their second big event of the year on 10 May following a strong performance in the opening...

One hundred laps around the sun for Warwick woman

It was a birthday worth a long wait for one happy Warwick resident this week. Mavis Pacey marked 100 laps around the sun on Tuesday...

Fuel prices drop as excise cut kicks in

In the past three weeks, since the federal government implemented a temporary halving of the fuel excise, Australians have eagerly awaited the relief of...

Turning interest into action this National Adopt a Shelter Pet Day

SavourLife Pet Adoptions and Southern Downs ARK are taking the time this National Adopt a Shelter Pet Day to remind locals of the thousands...