More lessons from Wales for moving beyond coal

by Jonathan Hiskes

Guardian columnist
George Monbiot reported
recently
on the unlikely groundswell of environmental progress in Wales, the
Appalachia of the U.K.
Its national Plaid Cymru party is more progressive and
more ambitious than Britain’s three leading parties when it comes to building a
low-carbon economy.

Monbiot argues that it’s
the unusually flexible and open political climate that enable Wales’ success: “The
English like to think of themselves as a modern and sophisticated nation, and
sometimes ignorantly view the Welsh as backward and uncouth. But as far as
democracy is concerned, the English are light years behind.”

I tried to make a
similar case last month. After visiting Welsh cleantech businesses and research
hubs for a week, I suggested it’s the political culture plus a national existential crisis brought on by the
collapse of the coal-mining industry that are driving Wales’ ambitious effort to become a cleantech leader. Because West Virginia
and other coal-dependent regions of the U.S. are following the same coal-driven
trajectory, just a few decades behind, Wales has a lot to teach them.

If you want the audio
version, I spoke
with Marc Steiner of WEAA Baltimore
about Wales’ lessons for Appalachia. Or
you can skip right over me and listen to Marc talk to West Virginia mountain-defender
Maria Gunnoe, who knows
her stuff
.

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