U.S. coal industry knew burning fossil fuels causes climate change as early as 1966

Edited by Ed Newman
2019-11-29 18:25:46

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Washington, November 29 (RHC)-- In the U.S., leaders of the coal industry knew as early as the mid-1960s that burning fossil fuels causes climate change.  That’s according to a recently discovered 1966 copy of the magazine Mining Congress Journal, in which the head of a now defunct mining research company wrote that the combustion of fossil fuels was increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, causing global temperature increases.

The magazine article, now over 50 years old, says: “Such changes in temperature will cause melting of the polar icecaps, which, in turn, would result in the inundation of many coastal cities, including New York and London.” 

The recently discovered article now provides evidence that both the coal and oil industries have known about catastrophic climate change for decades, yet worked to cover up the evidence in order to continue burning fossil fuels.

In related news, over 40 people were arrested in New Haven, Connecticut at a massive protest during the annual Harvard-Yale football game.  Hundreds of students, faculty, and alumni from both schools rushed the field during halftime to demand the two universities divest their billion-dollar endowments from fossil fuels and companies profiting off Puerto Rico’s debt crisis.



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