For Immediate Release, May  16, 2012 
            
              
                | Contact:  | 
                Anna Frazier, Diné  Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment, (928) 380-7697 
Mike Eisenfeld, San Juan  Citizens Alliance,  (505) 360-8994 
Taylor McKinnon, Center for Biological  Diversity, (928) 310-6713 
Rachel Conn, Amigos Bravos: (575) 770-8327 
Nellis  Kennedy-Howard, Sierra Club, (218) 849-4523 
Erik  Schlenker-Goodrich, Western Environmental Law Center,  (575) 613-4197 | 
               
             
            Suit Filed Against Expansion of Navajo Coal Mine  Polluting Four Corners Region 
            Federal Approval  Ignores Human Health and Environmental Impacts
               
          
              FARMINGTON, N.M.— After  decades of coal pollution from the 2040-megawatt Four Corners Power Plant and  BHP Billiton’s 13,000-acre Navajo Coal Mine that supplies it, Navajo and  conservation groups filed suit against the federal government late Tuesday for  improperly rubber-stamping a proposal to expand strip-mining  without full consideration of the damage and risks to health and the  environment.  
    
              “The Navajo mine has torn up the land, polluted the air, and contaminated waters  that families depend on,” said Anna Frazier of Diné CARE. “Residents in the  area deserve a full and thorough impact analysis that is translated into the  Navajo language to provide for real public participation, not another whitewash  for the coal industry.”  
            Navajo  Mine is located in San Juan County,   N.M., on the Navajo Nation. Four  Corners Power Plant, built in 1962, provides electricity to California,  Arizona, New Mexico  and Texas and is the largest coal-fired power  plant source of nitrogen oxides (NOx) in the United States. (NOx is associated  with public-health impacts including respiratory disease, heart attacks and  strokes). The legal action, brought under the National Environmental Policy  Act, challenges the Office of Surface Mining’s decision to allow BHP Billiton  to expand strip-mining operations into 714 acres of a portion of land  designated “Area IV North” and the agency’s claim that the mine did not cause  significant human health and environmental impacts.  
            The  present Area IV mine expansion was proposed in the wake of Diné Citizens  Against Ruining our Environment v. Klein (Diné CARE), 747 F. Supp.  2d 1234, 1263-64 (D. Colo. 2010). In that case, the U.S. District Court for the  District of Colorado  ruled that a previous proposal to strip-mine all 3,800 acres of Area IV North violated  the National Environmental Policy Act and ordered OSM to revisit its analysis  under the Act. 
            Unfortunately,  OSM’s new analysis only exacerbates the deficiencies of its first analysis.  OSM’s analysis justified a finding of no significant impact in a vacuum by  focusing only on a cursory analysis of impacts within the mine expansion’s  perimeter and ignoring indirect and cumulative impacts from mercury, selenium,  ozone, and other air and water pollutants caused by the combustion of coal at  the Four Corners Power Plant and the plant’s disposal of coal ash waste  generated by the coal mined from the expansion area.  
            “The way the approval was rushed  through and the way OSM put on blinders to the cumulative reality of coal  operations at the mine and the power plant is an injustice,” said Mike  Eisenfeld, New Mexico  energy coordinator with the San Juan Citizens Alliance. “It hides the true  magnitude of the damage going on with coal in our region and the risks of  green-lighting more of the same with no change.”  
            “Mercury and selenium  pollution from coal mining and combustion is driving endangered fish extinct in  the San Juan River while it threatens people’s  health in nearby communities,” said Taylor McKinnon, public lands campaigns  director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “These are massive  environmental problems facing the Four Corners  region and people — problems the Office of Surface Mining can’t ignore any  longer. ”   
            “Pollution and other  impacts from coal mining and coal power plants broadly impact New   Mexico’s rivers and streams, in particular the Chaco and San Juan rivers,” said  Rachel Conn, projects director at Amigos Bravos. “These rivers must be better  protected for agriculture, drinking water and fish.”  
            “Ultimately, we need  to transition away from coal and towards clean, renewable energy from New Mexico’s abundant  sun and wind,” said Nellis Kennedy-Howard with the Sierra Club. “As we make  that transition, we need to account for the true magnitude of coal’s impact to  human health and the environment.”  
            “When the  federal government gets out the rubber stamp in a situation like this, where so  much is at stake for clean air, vital waterways, and the people who depend on  them, that leaves no alternative but legal action to try to ensure fairness and  accountability,” said Erik  Schlenker-Goodrich, an attorney with the Western Environmental Law Center who  is representing the groups.  
            The lawsuit seeks a  comprehensive analysis of the Navajo Mine and Four Corners Power Plant’s  impacts to health and the environment to inform current and future coal-related  decisions and help illuminate opportunities to transition away from coal toward  clean, renewable energy generated by New    Mexico’s abundant sun and wind.  
            Diné  Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment (CARE),  San Juan Citizens Alliance, Center for Biological Diversity, Amigos Bravos and  the Sierra Club are represented in the case by the Western Environmental Law  Center. 
            A copy of the filed  lawsuit can be found here.  
            
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