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AlterNet / By Jeff Biggers
In many respects, some folks might use more water flicking on their lights, than chugging back a glass of that wondrous stuff.
Here's a sobering fact: Coal-fired power plants use approximately 1.5 trillion gallons of water a year in the US.
In many respects, some folks might use more water flicking on their lights, than chugging back a glass of that wondrous stuff.
Makes you wonder: Has the EPA ever tabulated the external costs of coal on our water resources?
And then, after that refreshing drink of desperately needed water, the 600-odd coal-fired plants (the EIA actually reports 1,445 coal-firedgenerators) typically throw up their chemically enhanced processed wastewater into our rivers and waterways, poisoning our own drinking water.