Peabody's 10-K: (1) long term contracts lock us in to coal dependence (2) Management will get rich while workers and nature bear the costs.— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
Peabody's 10-K: 352 pages of how it works… https://t.co/KKqdLqS0jA
— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
Peabody's 10-K: Problem is, their cronies, like @AmerenMissouri, have fought against solar, renewables, while signing long-term contracts— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
We should have been working to transition grid toward solar, wind many years ago but @AmerenMissouri was contracting coal far into future.— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
And, since they must do country club together @peabodyenergy & @AmerenMissouri CEOs were doing coal deals while earth on fire. They knew.— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
And @AmerenMissouri, fought to end solar rebates while fighting local MO communities to build a new coal ash dump in MO River flood plain.— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
New coal ash dump means their only plan is to burn more coal, which their cronies over at @peabodyenergy will supply. @AmerenMissouri— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
This is what you call carbon lock-in. They use political and economic power to block change. They knew. @peabodyenergy @AmerenMissouri— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
Not only did they know they were willfully warming the planet, they fought against climate science. #criminal @peabodyenergy @AmerenMissouri— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
And they've got willing cronies over on my own campus @wustl who were green-washing for them. #cleancoal @peabodyenergy @AmerenMissouri— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
Now who's laughing? Well nobody, we should not be happy at state of the earth or our dirty air. Thanks @wustl @peabodyenergy @AmerenMissouri— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
Problem is, we still have long fight to seize and change the grid. Communities, movements, universities, get off of dirty energy.— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016
To the end of dirty energy: pic.twitter.com/08ZBV3n7l1— SLSProject (@slsproject) March 18, 2016