What's My Connection to Mountaintop Removal?

NOTE: THE DATA USED BY THIS TOOL IS NOT UP TO DATE

Please visit the MyConnection methodology page HERE to learn when the data used by this tool was last updated. While
there are no plans to update this data, notice will be given here and on the methodology page should an update occur.


The price of your power: Kayford Mountain, West Virginia

"Mountaintop mining is practically raising the dead, while burying the living." - Larry Gibson, resident of Kayford mountain

Kayford Mountain- Leveled

Larry at the Stanley Reunion


In 1986, mountaintop removal operations began near Larry Gibson's home. Over the next 20 years, "the slow motion destruction of Kayford Mountain has been continuous - 24 hours a day, seven days a week." Coal companies have flattened more than 12,000 acres of mountain landscape around his home. Where he once looked up at the peaks of Kayford from his family graveyard, he now looks 300 feet straight down at a blasted and devastated landscape. Read more.

You are connected to mountaintop removal. Your electricity provider, East Mississippi Elec Pwr Assn, uses coal from mountaintop removal mines

The story of Kayford Mountain, West Virginia, is one of many that are connected to the power plants on your grid, which are marked on the map below.

The mountaintop removal mines shown in red are connected to the nearest coal power plant on your grid: Tennessee Eastman Operations, operated by Eastman Chemical Co-TN Ops.

Click on the mine symbols to take a closer look in Google Maps, or click here for a detailed explanation.

Want to Break Your Connection?


1.  Join the 132,446 people that have already
       pledged to help end mountaintop removal.



Tell me more  

2. Ask your Senators and Representative to support
   legislation to end mountaintop removal coal mining.

3.  Tell others about this page


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4.  Buy Green Power.  CLICK HERE to find
        Green Power Programs
in your state!


View your connection in Google Earth (KML)



LEGEND:

The closest power plant on your grid that is connected to mountaintop removal: Tennessee Eastman Operations, operated by Eastman Chemical Co-TN Ops

Other coal-fired power plants on the Tennessee Valley Authority grid that are connected to mountaintop removal

Mountaintop removal mines that are connected to your power grid

NAVIGATION HINTS:

Click any power plant to see how it is connected to mountaintop removal or any mine symbol to get a close-up view of that mine. The controls on the top left of the map allow you to zoom in closer to the ground or back out to get a broader perspective. Even easier, though, is to navigate with the "hand" tool. Clicking and dragging on the map will move the map in the same direction, double-clicking on a point will center the map on that point and zoom you in a little closer, and double clicking with the right mouse button (ctrl-click for macintosh users) to center on a point and zoom out.


Explain My Connection


WHO PROVIDES MY ELECTRICITY?

The East Mississippi Elec Pwr Assn service area is part of a larger interconnected electric grid operated by Tennessee Valley Authority. There are a total of 12 coal-fired power plants on this grid that are connected to mountaintop removal. Following are details on how each is connected to mountaintop removal.

If East Mississippi Elec Pwr Assn is not the company that sends your electric bill, please CLICK HERE to select your electric provider from a list.

You may also find your electricity provider in the following list of all utilities:


If your electric provider is not on these lists, please notify us


THERE are 7 plants DIRECTLY CONNECTED TO MOUNTAINTOP REMOVAL ON YOUR GRID

Plants on the Tennessee Valley Authority grid that purchase coal directly from mountaintop removal strip mines in Appalachia include:


THERE are 5 plants INDIRECTLY CONNECTED TO MOUNTAINTOP REMOVAL ON YOUR GRID

Plants on the Tennessee Valley Authority grid that do not use mountaintop removal coal directly, but purchase coal from companies that operate mountaintop removal mines in Central Appalachia include: