YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Judge adds 2nd mining tract to Wyo. coal lawsuit

    CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — A judge has added a second coal lease to an environmentalist lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service that contests Wyoming coal mining on grounds that include climate change.

    The Forest Service argued for the lease to be litigated separately, but U.S. District Judge Alan Johnson granted the request by WildEarth Guardians, the Sierra Club and the Powder River Basin Resource Council to add the lease to their lawsuit.

    Doing so would neither delay the case nor confuse the issues, Johnson wrote soon after holding a hearing on the request Thursday.

    "There's no good reason not to," he summed up in his order.

    The lawsuit will now contest two coal tracts containing more than a billion tons of coal reserves next to St. Louis-based Peabody Energy Corp.'s North Antelope Rochelle Mine in the Powder River Basin.

    The groups initially sued over the South Porcupine coal tract, which holds 402 million tons of federal coal reserves. In May, Peabody subsidiary BTU Western Resources Inc. successfully bid more than $446 million with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to mine the tract.

    The North Porcupine coal tract also will be part of the lawsuit now. BTU Western Resources successfully bid $793 million for the tract's 721 million tons of coal in June.

    Much of the coal in the two tracts underlies the Thunder Basin National Grassland, which is overseen by the Forest Service.

    The Forest Service approved the leases based on previous BLM studies. The groups allege that the BLM studies were flawed and the Forest Service violated a number of federal environmental laws.

    Problems with the BLM analyses, the groups allege, included failure to sufficiently consider how burning the coal would contribute to climate change.

    The BLM determined that electric utilities would simply find some other coal source if the Wyoming coal weren't mined. That "strains credulity" because of the size of the North Antelope Rochelle operation, the groups allege.

    Powder River Basin mines yield close to 40 percent of the nation's coal production and the surface mine accounts for more than 20 percent of the basin's production, according to the lawsuit.

    Three other lawsuits WildEarth Guardians has filed against the BLM to contest Wyoming coal leases are pending before federal judges in Washington, D.C.

    Loading...
    • Officials: Suspect lunged at FBI agent with knife

      BOSTON (AP) — Law enforcement officials say a man was shot while he was being questioned in the Boston Marathon bombing case after he lunged at an FBI agent with a knife.

    • Rare View of Ancient Galaxy Crash Revealed

      Astronomers have caught two big ancient galaxies in the act of colliding, shedding new light on the role such megamergers played in galactic evolution during the universe's youth.

    • Why We Can't Forget That Oklahoma's Senators Voted Against Sandy Relief

      Nearly four months ago, Oklahoma Senators Tom Coburn and James Inhofe both voted against H.R.152, the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act that eventually sent $50.5 billion in relief to victims of Hurricane Sandy. And in the flurry of last night's devastation in Moore, Oklahoma. it was impossible not to forget that fact, knowing the federal government would soon rally to the cause.

    • Florida high school suspends teacher for touching girl on head with banana

      Is a cigar sometimes just a cigar? That debate will remain unresolved, but The Daily Caller can say with confidence that a banana is definitely not always just a banana at North Marion High School near Ocala, Fla.

    • 18-year-old’s invention can recharge a cell phone in 30 seconds

      A teenager from Saratoga, California took home one of the top prizes at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair late last week after showing off her invention, which can fully charge a cell phone in 30 seconds or less. Eesha Khare was given the Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award and a $50,000 prize for being runner-up in the competition, which was won by a 19-year-old who unveiled a new spin on self-driving car technology. Khare’s battery technology requires a new component to be installed inside the phone battery itself, and Intel notes that it also has potential applications for car batteries.

    • File: Josh Powell had affair before wife vanished

      WEST VALLEY CITY, Utah (AP) — Newly released police files say Josh Powell had an affair with a Utah woman just months before his wife disappeared.

    • Can you pass a Bill of Rights quiz?

      How much do you know about the basic facts about the Bill of Rights? Take our 10-question quiz and find out now!

    Loading...

    Follow Yahoo! News

    Brought to you byYahoo! Finance