rooster59 Posted June 17, 2017 Share Posted June 17, 2017 Coal-fuelled cement plant starts operations despite protests by locals Despite protests by the locals, the 500-tonne cement factory has started commercial operations in Kyakmayaw township of Mon state, according to report of The Irrawaddy Online on Friday. Mon state Chief Minister Dr Aye Zan confirmed on Thursday that the US$400 million project run by Mawlamyine Cement United – a joint venture between Thailand’ Siam Cement Group and Pacific Link Cement Industries – will be fuelled by a coal-fired power plant built within the compound. According to the Mon state’s Myanmar Port Authority, nearly 200,000 tonnes of coal has been shipped from Moulmein Port to the plant along the Attaran river. Locals fear the plant will pollute their environments and have protested against the lack of their consultation. Full story: http://englishnews.thaipbs.or.th/coal-fuelled-cement-plant-starts-operations-despite-protests-locals/ -- © Copyright Thai PBS 2017-06-17 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Srikcir Posted June 17, 2017 Share Posted June 17, 2017 In October 2015 – Thailand submitted its new climate action plan to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Took only a year and a half to invalidate it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stargeezr Posted June 17, 2017 Share Posted June 17, 2017 The new coal fired places do not have the pollution that the old ones had. Go to China and see their factories and power plants. One thing about coal, it does not have the radiation hazards that a Nuclear plant has, or the risk of a melt down like what has happened in Japan or Russia. However the green people will not use this logic, and only talk about the bad dirty polluting coal industry. Geezer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Srikcir Posted June 17, 2017 Share Posted June 17, 2017 2 hours ago, Stargrazer9889 said: The new coal fired places do not have the pollution that the old ones had. Go to China and see their factories and power plants. One thing about coal, it does not have the radiation hazards that a Nuclear plant has, or the risk of a melt down like what has happened in Japan or Russia. However the green people will not use this logic, and only talk about the bad dirty polluting coal industry. Geezer Thailand is not China, especially when it comes to energy technology. China now has four nuclear power plants under construction with an overall twenty planned in the next two decades. China wants to phase out dirty coal-fired power plants. Wikipedia Many countries with existing nuclear power programs (Argentina, Armenia, Brazil, Bulgaria, China, Czech Rep., India, Pakistan, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, South Korea, South Africa, UAE, Ukraine, UK, USA) have plans to build new power reactors (beyond those now under construction). http://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/plans-for-new-reactors-worldwide.aspx The cost for new ultra-supercritical coal-fired power (aka "clean coal technology) costs around three times the cost of wind or solar. http://reneweconomy.com.au/clean-coal-most-expensive-new-power-supply-says-bnef-and-not-all-that-clean-74531/ Coal itself is not a clean fuel, something that the Thai government erroneously promotes. Prayut has uses Article 44 to bypass consideration of expensive emissions control equipment necessary to burn coal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stargeezr Posted June 18, 2017 Share Posted June 18, 2017 Nuclear power is not a clean safe power source either, and when things go wrong as they did in Japan and Russia, the clean up is beyond any 0ther power source to clean up. Would you go live near the Japan or Russia sites even if you could. Well neither Russians or the Japanese will be living near those sites on our life time. Coal may not be considered clean, but I would rather live near a coal fired power station, than a Nuclear site. Geezer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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