[PRCo] Coal and Smoke

DF Cramer alto_trombone at hotmail.com
Mon May 26 07:15:32 EDT 2014


Full disclaimer---I come from a long line of coal miners. My grandfather Cramer was a fire boss in the mines around Hecla and my dad ran the brought the coal up the cage at Versailles until that mine closed and then he ran the cleaning plant at Carpentertown Coal & Coke outside of Templeton, PA. I worked the beehive ovens there for two summers to pay for college. So i am pro-coal. Nothing better than the smell of burning coal. Maybe that comes from living in Liberty Boro as a child and smelling the Clairton  Works.
The biggest issue the coal industry faces in western Pennsylvania & West Virginia is competition---they cannot compete with the coal from the Powder River Basin in Wyoming. It is cheaper to mine and has a much lower sulfur content than Appalachian coal. Lower sulfur helps power plants meet current requirements.
I had to opportunity to witness some of the coal traffic on the UP & BNSF in western Nebraska last summer. I have never seen so much freight traffic anywhere. See attached image from Alliance, NE.
The two following links provide much more detailed information.
http://www.blm.gov/wy/st/en/programs/energy/Coal_Resources/PRB_Coal.html
The top 10 producing coal mines in the country are located in the Wyoming portion of the Powder River Basin. These mines produced about 375 million short tons in 2012.Coal mines in the Powder River Basin in Wyoming employed over 7,000 personnel in 2010.Quick FactsThe electricity used by one out of every five homes and businesses in the US is produced from coal mined in Wyoming.Over 100 coal trains enter Wyoming empty and leave loaded and bound for all points daily.Nearly one in six Wyoming workers are directly or indirectly employed in coal development.The largest US coal mine, Black Thunder, lies within the Wyoming portion of the Powder River Basin.
http://large.stanford.edu/publications/coal/references/docs/052992.pdf


Dennis F. Cramer 
http://home.windstream.net/dfc1/
> 
> Someone wrote:
> "We all know that smoke control is a done thing in Pittsburgh but it is
> fascinating reading back in the 1940s when the opposition … the miners, the
> coal industry, and the factories were fighting to make sure it didn't
> happen.   They were all taking the stance that smoke is good for the
> economy."
> 
> They still are taking that stance. Now they say everyone is waging a "war
> against coal". They also say that they now mine "clean coal", whatever that
> is.

> Herb Brannon

 		 	   		  


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