Each States in the United States set the laws and regulation on mining coals. The major laws were Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the National Environmental Policy Act. After the laws and regulation got strict, the coal companies including Peabody Energy shifts as ‘Green-Coal’ which made an advanced coal technologies. The coal technologies changed into clean coal technologies successfully reduced the major toxic such as sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and other emissions. In the Peabody Energy (2013 Corporate and Social Responsibility Report, 2014) Corporate and Social Responsibility Report mentions that more than $100 billion in these technologies is recent decades have been invested. Theses technologies that been motioned were, Near-Zero Emissions, Low Carbon, Carbon-Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS) and other technologies. Moreover, Peabody Energy resorted thousands of acres of mined lands and had been monitor the land for the environmental conditions. Not only these small change of behaviors, but also planted more than 1.5 million trees. The company put efforts to reduced greenhouse …show more content…
In the article by Kate Shepart, “World’s Biggest Coal Company, World’s Biggest PR Firm Pair Up to Promote Coal for Poor People.” mentions Kert Dvies, director of the Climate Investigation Center quotes “Burson-Marstellar has spent decades working for some of the World’s worst perpetrators of human rights and environmental abused.” continues, “So Burson-Marsteller are well suited to help Peabody push dirty coal of the world’s poorest people. (Sheppard, 2013)” The online article was posted on 2014, which it was after Peabody Energy mention ‘Green-Coal’. Additionally, Kert Dvies mentions how Peabody are going towards to the poorest people and backup his words, Peabody’s goal was to change the poor living condition area such as lack of global energy access. In Peabody Energy 2011 Corporation and Social Responsibility Report addresses their plan “In its study on energy poverty released in this past year, the international Energy Agency (IEA) warned that the lack of global energy access threatens to stop the world from reaching its United Nations Millennium goals for poverty reduction. The agency called for $41 billion in annual investments to create energy access (2011 Corporate and Social Responsibility Report, 2012).” Since coal has been the world’s significant in a developing and developed economic across the global, as to the economic interest, the demand of