Coal is a radioactive lead balloon unless you use slave labor or pay workers 50 cents an hour. You can't pay coal miners and maintenance workers more than engineers and scientists and expect to compete with less labor intensive fuels like natural gas. China and India have dug themselves into a deep coal pit, but we helped. For a long time the industrial age was steam powered and the steam was coal fired. But as technology advanced, coal even as a dirt cheap fuel continued to lose out to lower maintenance fuels like diesel and natural gas and electrical power. The last hurrah (after steel furnaces closed) was large scale power plants. But they have a finite life and the coal plants wear out faster and require more maintenance and when it's time to renew the infrastructure investment,it's hard to say NO to turning on a gas valve to replace mile long coal trains, coal dumps, and the staff to run them, exotic emission suppression systems. India and China with large manual labor forces, cheaply paid could use coal competitively, but as their economies advance they will at some point no longer be able to afford to subsidize coal. The only Government health care plan Republicans seem to support is Black Lung Care, which is expensive but the pool of recipients is dying out so they are willing to wait for the need to disappear. Coal is dying, but politicians can put it on life support at a cost to our economy.
FWIW we forced India and China into using more coal because the alternative for power was to import expensive foreign fuels and workers. Fifty years after American railroads abandoned steam locomotives, China was building new ones. They had the labor pool for the old technology and needed to employ the work force and sending money out of the country to buy only newer technology would have slowed economic growth. If they hadn't had the coal alternative,
they would still be third world countries.
OdontoBear66;842853779 said:
So, could you explain to me in simple terms why, as stipulated in the Paris Accord, the carbon tax on the US is so important. And in terms where you understand I am asking from a standpoint of questioning why necessary. All I have heard is "We should do it" but no real rational as to why. I am open to absorbing, but just saying we must do it to help underdeveloped countries just doesn't do it for me. I keep suggesting that the US has been doing a very credible job of improving its carbon imprint, and it is continuing. Somehow the carbon tax gets added on, and I just do not understand why. And then to make it stick in my craw even more we let China and India continue with coal while our coal has nicely been dropped like a lead balloon, which in itself helps our footprint immensely.