Was going to post in the Japan thread, but thought better.
Thanks for the chart, Kogut. Leaf, it is likely one guy who fell off a roof or another guy who electrocutes himself is where that number comes from. Granted, the industrial accidents at a coal plant (usually caused by machinery in the coal yard, occasionally a steam leak that produces an invisible lance of whistling death that will slice through a man) are a lot more coal-related, but if anyone fell off the roof at a coal plant, it would count just the same. And people do... one guy fell, got his midsection pierced by a piece of vertical rebar, continued to fall, and survived
thanks to slowing down when he got impaled.Growing up by a coal plant is so much fun!
To be honest, coal(or any other kind of) mines are dangerous as well, and they don't exactly make the region where they're located fit for organic farming.
As the great-grandson of a coal mine owner, I can tell you the old family drift mine is a hole in a lightly wooded hill surrounded by cornfields. In 1930 when it operated, it was organic farming right down to the horses. When I was a boy I went to a Scout camp that was a reclaimed pit mine overgrown with trees. It was surrounded by cornfields. Today I drive to town past a mine, also constructed in a hill, surrounded by cornfields. Now it may well be that "organic" farming isn't possible because of some frailty of the crops or violating a definition, or it may be that some poorly-managed coal mines have serious sulphur runoff problems, but in my experience coal mines and farms are not mutually exclusive, save the land required for any above-ground works, and if properly managed most of the old problems can be prevented. So far as safety is concerned, my wife had a classmate who got caught in a hay baler as a little girl, which is just one example of the real dangers on farms. I would hazard to say farming is far more dangerous than mining in the United States, so if coal mining is too dangerous for energy production (as you seem to be suggesting) I can only respond that by the same token agriculture is too dangerous for food production.