Coal Is Dirty. Amid Protests, Why New England Is Still Burning It For Power
On a freezing night in December, about a dozen climate activists stood on the train tracks in a wooded section of West Boylston, Mass. They huddled together, headlamps and flashlights pointing south towards an approaching coal train.
The light from the train’s headlights got brighter, and the horns blared louder and longer, but the activists stayed put. In past protests, the slow-moving train bound for New Hampshire had stopped after “scouts” a few miles ahead called the railroad’s emergency dispatcher to report people on the tracks.
This time, the train gave no sign of slowing.
The activists finally ran off the tracks when the train was about 50 feet away. No one was hurt, and the train continued on to one of the region’s last remaining coal-fired power plants: the Merrimack Generation Station in Bow, New Hampshire.
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