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How capitalism underdeveloped Appalachia: The economic truth Hillbilly Elegy ignores – People s World

Help Save People s World The economic crisis has hit People s World hard. We need the support of all our friends and readers to continue publishing. How capitalism underdeveloped Appalachia: The economic truth ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ ignores December 1, 2020 10:27 AM CDT By Michael Berkowitz Fog hovers over a mountaintop as a cutout depicting a coal miner stands at a memorial to local miners killed on the job in Cumberland, Ky. Kentucky coal miners bled and died to unionize, but the days when King Coal dominated the lives of people here are long gone. The legacy of this exploitative period is missing, though, from Ron Howard s film adaptation of J.D. Vance s Hillbilly Elegy. | David Goldman / AP

Natural gas development has been a game-changer for Pa economy | Opinion

Natural gas development has been a game-changer for Pa. economy | Opinion Updated Dec 23, 2020; Posted Dec 23, 2020 In this file photo from March 12, 2020, work continues at a shale gas well drilling site in St. Mary s, Pa. AP Facebook Share By David Spigelmyer For more than a decade, responsible natural gas development has been a winner for workers particularly skilled trades men and women families, and the health of our environment. Not to mention the benefits for Pennsylvania consumers as well. State residents heat their homes, water, cook food, and dry clothes without interruption and with an average savings of at least $1,100 a year, according to data from the state Public Utilities Commission.

Coal s ascendancy to leave ailing U S miners in pit

2 min read Coal’s ascendancy looks set to leave already ailing U.S. miners stuck in a pit. Within five years, the black rock is likely to replace oil as the world’s top energy source, according to the International Energy Agency. That should be good news for America’s miners, which are sitting on 28 percent of the planet’s coal. But they’re ill placed to do well from the boom. America’s reserves equate to several hundred years of the nation’s current coal consumption. They’re also about 50 percent larger than Russia’s, which has the second-largest set of seams. Combined, the two countries burn about 1.2 billion tonnes of King Coal a year, equivalent to the 16 percent increase in global consumption the IEA expects by 2017.

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