Dirty Coal: Time for Rome to Weigh In?
The Washington Post reports that plans for new coal plants have been stalled by growing opposition. The pressure has even hit Wall Street: Citigroup analysts downgraded the investment outlook for coal companies across the board. But news that the EPA is protecting the coal industry on orders from the White House shows the battle is far from over. Could there be help coming from unlikely quarters?
See this related news out of the Phillipines. The Greenpeace chapter there has teamed up with prelates led by the Catholic Bishops Conference to fight contruction of a dirty coal plant.
Msgr. Meliton Oso, social action director of the Jaro Archdiocese, said
the Church is standing by a pastoral letter issued by two archbishops
and six bishops in Western Visayas in 2005 opposing the construction of
coal plants anywhere in the region.
Now that the Vatican has announced it is becoming the first carbon-free state in the world, time seems ripe for a similar pastoral letter from the Pope himself, opposing construction of coal plants anywhere on earth.
A letter in Latin would work just fine.











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