Coal mines and power plant give Navajos income, controversy
by Dennis Wagner - Nov. 2, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic
WINDOW ROCK - A green controversy fueled by coal-fired power plants is raging on America's largest Indian reservation.
On one side is Joe Shirley Jr., president of the Navajo Nation, who
rejects the notion of climate change even though he recently won an
international award for environmentalism. On the other are
environmentalists opposed to power plants in Indian Country and to the
coal mines that provide their fuel. Caught in the middle are tribal
members concerned with economic survival and the protection of sacred
lands.
The dispute centers on fundamental questions of religion and heritage, as well as tribal finances.
The Navajo Generating Station near Page, which uses coal from mines
on Black Mesa, employs hundreds of tribal members and helps finance the
tribal government. The Desert Rock Energy Project, proposed in western
New Mexico, has been under consideration for years. The $3 billion
plant would be fueled by coal from a new mine, bringing more jobs and
revenue to the Navajos.
The Environmental Protection Agency wants the Navajo Generating
Station to install costly air-scrubbing equipment, an expense the tribe
and some Arizona utility companies say could lead to the plant's
closure. Environmental groups, which have targeted the plant for years
because of the emissions-related haze that builds up over the Grand
Canyon, applaud the scrubbers.
Andy Bessler, Sierra Club regional representative in the Southwest,
said coal-fired power plants account for about 30 to 40 percent of
carbon emissions worldwide. The Navajo Generating Station, the nation's
third-largest emitter of nitrogen oxides, spews 19.9 million tons of
carbon emissions each year and uses 9.1 billion gallons of water -
enough to fill Saguaro Lake twice with water left over. The nearby Four
Corners Power Plant is the second-largest emitter of nitrogen oxides.
"If we want to take care of global warming, coal power plants are
the low-hanging fruit," Bessler said. "We can't just continue with
business as usual if we want to protect the planet."
But Shirley, who last week was suspended by the tribal council amid
an unrelated Navajo power struggle, challenges the very theory of
worldwide climate change.
"There's no signs that have told me it's a problem," he said.
"There's a lot of people running around out there saying, 'The sky is
going to fall down. It's going to be the end of the world.' I don't
believe that. I don't know what global warming is about. . . . Maybe
I'm blind, I don't know. Maybe I don't have the intelligence. But where
are the signs?"
Shirley, whose father-in-law is a medicine man, acknowledged that
some Navajo traditionalists recognize climate change as a threat and
have joined tribal conservation groups such as Diné CARE in claiming
he sold out Native heritage to big business. Those critics, he said,
have been sucked in by environmentalist propaganda.
Last month, Shirley criticized the Sierra Club, Grand Canyon Trust
and other green organizations for interfering with Navajo sovereignty
and caring more about insects or fish than the lives of Native
Americans. The rebuke was especially stunning from the leader of a
tribe that has for years aligned itself with green groups in political
causes.
Six months ago, Shirley accepted the Nuclear-Free Future Award in
Norway for collaborating with environmental groups to fight uranium
mines near the Grand Canyon. Shirley, a Christian, said he consulted
with Navajo traditionalists before deciding that carbon-spewing power
plants and open-pit coal mines do not damage the Earth.
But Tony Skrelunas, a Navajo who works as Native American program
coordinator for the Grand Canyon Trust, expressed dismay that Shirley
spoke of resources without emphasizing stewardship.
"Even sheep herders learn to protect land from overgrazing," he
said, "and to do the right thing so rains will come. . . . The thing
that I find shocking is that, as Navajos, we are taught that there are
different monsters in creation that try to destroy us. I think one of
those that is really rising up is climate change."
More than 1,500 United Nations climate scientists agree that
Earth's temperature has begun to rise at a potentially disastrous rate,
and that carbon emissions are the major cause. Skrelunas noted a study
issued this spring by Jayne Belnap, a scientist with the U.S.
Geological Survey, which says global warming is expected to increase
temperatures in the Four Corners area 10 degrees by 2100. Already,
Belnap reports, drought has tripled the number of dust storms swirling
from the high desert into the Colorado Rockies.
"I grew up on Big Mountain. We raised sheep," said Skrelunas. "It's
massively different now. . . . Not as green. It doesn't rain anymore.
There are lots of dust storms."
The Navajo reservation sprawls over portions of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, with an estimated population over 250,000.
Anna Frazier, coordinator for Diné CARE, said
the mines and electric plants have wrecked the land, sucked springs dry
and polluted skies. She said Shirley ignores those facts, trading
heritage for short-term cash.
"He's ignoring the fundamental laws of the Navajo people," Frazier
said. "Our traditions tell us we have to protect and preserve all
living things."
Shirley said his priority is to help the Navajo people, who suffer
from an unemployment rate over 50 percent, with average annual incomes
under $15,000.
Environmentalists have exacerbated the financial woes, he added,
forcing the closure of a tribal sawmill and helping to shut down
another power plant - the Mohave Generating Station near Laughlin, Nev.
- that received coal from Black Mesa.
"They came onto our land," Shirley said. "They didn't tell me,
'Here, Mr. President. Here are other green jobs.' They just shut us
down, put more people into impoverishment. You want me to accept that?
"I'm working on independence, period," he said. "If it takes green
jobs to get us back to standing on our own two feet, I'm for green
jobs. If it takes Desert Rock or Navajo Generating Station . . . I'm
for Desert Rock and Navajo Generating Station."
Source: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/2009/11/02/20091102navajo1102.html
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This blog site centers on the proposed coal-fired power plant called the Desert Rock Energy Project on Navajo lands in Northwest New Mexico. Navajo community members in Burnham, New Mexico (proposed site) update this site with news articles (past to present) for regular public viewing and updates. Thank you for your support.
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Tribe's environmental fight
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