The Front Porch Blog, with Updates from AppalachiaThe Front Porch Blog, with Updates from Appalachia

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Virginia Coal Analysis – Take a Deep Breath Virginia

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

The VA General Assembly meets for 30-90 days a year to discuss an vote on THOUSANDS of bills that affect the future of the Commonwealth of Virginia! This past February, Appalachian Voices staff and volunteers paid the oldest legislative body in the country a visit. We presented THIS REPORT and asked reps to reconsider plans to re-regulate the energy market in the state.

Virginia Coal Production Predictions and Actual Trends

Read the full lobby piece to find out why….

The cost of constructing a new coal-fired power plant has increased by 50% in the last year alone.

Appalachian coal production is declining, coal prices are rising, and we’re importing coal from Indonesia.

Now Dominion is promoting a plan to re-regulate electricity markets that would put all the risks onto Virginia’s rate payers.

Are We Heading Into a “Perfect Storm?”

Southwest Virginia Extent of Surface Mining


SC Forestry Commision: More wildfires than usual this month

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

SC Forestry Commission: More wildfires than usual this month

COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) – August has been an unusually fiery month, according to experts at the South Carolina Forestry Commission. The state agency is charged with fighting wildfires throughout the state.

Agency Fire Chief Paul Watts says wildfire behavior has been more aggressive in recent weeks, due in part to the drought conditions that persist across the Palmetto State.

Watts says, “Our fire numbers are up, we’re having more than usual, they’re behaving more aggressively and are larger in acreage. We usually don’t see flame heights extending beyond tree tops in August.”

In the first half of the month, 215 fires were reported to the SCFC. A look at the last ten years of Augusts shows an average of 160.

South Carolina’s wildfire season is fire season is normally in late winter/early spring, but the drought has extended the season this year. Today, Watts said, “Our relative humidity and winds don’t take us to Red Flag Alert status yet, but we’re getting close.”

Agency officials urge South Carolinians to take precautions outdoors with regards to burning. The drought index is about 700 and the scale only goes to 800. The index is one of the tools we use to estimate wildfire risk with regards to fuel moisture. These extreme conditions have left ground fuels dry and ripe for fire.

This unusual pattern takes its toll on the Commission personnel who battle these fires too. Hot weather makes fighting abnormally large and numerous fires that much more dangerous.

This article found on:
https://www.wistv.com/Global/story.asp?S=6956724&nav=menu36_3

News notes are courtesy of Southern Forests Network News Notes
www.southernsustainableforests.org


Steady loss of hemlock trees could devestate ecosystem

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

Steady loss of hemlock trees could devastate ecosystem

OTTO — Chelcy Ford looked up into the early afternoon sunshine and pointed to the naked, brown branches of the hemlock trees surrounding her. The bare-limbed evergreens are a familiar sight here in the Southern Appalachian Mountains, where nearly all of the hemlocks are dying after being infested by the woolly adelgid.

Unlike many other scientists trying to figure out how to save the trees, Ford and a small group of researchers at the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory here are letting them die.

Their hope is that by studying the dying hemlocks they can begin to answer the question that seems to puzzle everyone: What will happen when they’re gone?

The woolly adelgid and its distinctive white, snow-like egg sacs have moved through the region faster than anyone had predicted, and scientists say all of the hemlocks in Western North Carolina’s forests could be gone in the next five years.

As more research continues, scientists are finding that the hemlock plays a critical role in its ecosystem, and without another species to replace it, the hemlock’s loss could mean major changes for the area’s forests.

“We lost the American chestnut,” Rusty Rhea, an entomologist with the U.S. Forest Service, said of the tree species that was essentially wiped out by a fungus in the middle of the 20th century. “It went away and the oak trees slid in there and took its place. It was a pseudo-substitute.

“When the hemlock goes away, there’s not going to be a pseudo-substitute. That habitat is going to be lost.”
The threat to the hemlocks

The woolly adelgids were thought to have come into the United States on ornamental plants imported from Japan in the 1920s, appearing first in Virginia in the 1950s and then making their way up to the Northeast in the 1990s.

The bugs made their way into the Southern Appalachians around 2002, and now many hemlocks in neighborhoods all over Western North Carolina display the distinctive white, cottony balls on their branches. Without any natural predators, the adelgids have flourished, feeding on Eastern and Carolina hemlocks, which are only found in the Southern Appalachians. The adelgids inject toxic saliva into the trees that effectively kills them over a period of years.

“It caught us off-guard,” said Chris Ulrey, a plant ecologist with the Blue Ridge Parkway. “All of a sudden it popped up all over Western North Carolina, and it just spread.”

Ulrey and others who spend a lot of time in the area’s forests said the loss of the hemlock in the Southern Appalachians has progressed much faster than anyone had predicted. Ulrey said nearly all of the trees on the Blue Ridge Parkway are infested. About one-quarter of the hemlocks in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park are already dead, and forester Tom Remaley estimates that all the untreated hemlocks in the park will be dead in two to five years.

“Really cold winters will really slow it down,” Jim Vose, a researcher at Coweeta, said of the adelgids. “We don’t have those conditions. We have ideal conditions for adelgids to reproduce.”

In the Southern Appalachians, hemlocks are typically found in riparian zones, areas of vegetation near streams, and are a keystone species, meaning they play a unique role in the ecosystem.

“There’s only a few that are keystone species that if you lose them, it can disproportionate effects on the ecosystem,” Vose said.

The streams and areas surrounding them are home to a large number of fish, including trout, along with insects, salamanders and hundreds of invertebrates. The hemlocks themselves are home to a few different species of migratory birds.

“We have the highest diversity in riparian zones of anywhere in the country,” Vose said. “Those environmental conditions are going to change.”

Scientists at Coweeta, a research arm of the forest service, started examining the effects of the loss of the hemlocks in 2004 by setting up plots in riparian zones in their laboratory in Otto.
Studying the effects

The first study published by Ford and Vose this July determined that the hemlocks are taking up much less water as they die – about 10 percent less annually and 30 percent less in the winter and spring.

This increase in water in the areas where hemlocks grow means that stream flow could increase and the riparian zones could become wetter, which could have consequences for all of the animals and plants in the area.

The hemlocks, with their dense canopy, also provide shade that helps to regulate stream temperatures and keep the ground moist. The loss of the hemlock’s canopy could change the temperatures in streams and riparian zones that are critical to the survival of everything from the trout to the worms in the soil.

The loss of the tree may mean that many birds will lose their homes. And there are other considerations — the hemlock’s needles play a role in the acidity of the soil and the tree’s tannins are already washing into streams in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

“Just from the basic water balance to the sunlight hitting the forest floor, it will really have a cascading effect to species in the area,” said Mark Cantrell, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “I think because of the widespread and catastrophic level of impact, we can expect there to be significant changes.”

The biggest changes might be when the hemlocks, which can weigh up to 2,000 pounds, fall down. This will send huge amounts of wood onto the forest floor, causing danger to campers and increasing the risk of forest fires. The large trees can also alter the region’s streams, changing the water’s acidity and causing blockages, which could lead to flooding, said Will Blozan, president of the Eastern Native Tree Society and an arborist who lives in Asheville.

Without another evergreen species to take the place of the hemlocks, hardwood trees may move into the area. But these trees cannot provide the same functions as an evergreen, and the thick rhododendron that often thrives in hemlock stands will make it difficult for other large tree species to move in.

As more research comes out of the laboratory, scientists are beginning to discover just how devastating the loss the species will be. Vose said understanding these effects will help researchers determine how to minimize the impact of the loss of the hemlock in the Southern Appalachians.

“Everyone’s just saying it’s going to be bad,” Ulrey said, “But we’re not going to know until it starts happening.”
Trying to save some hemlocks

While the Forest Service, the National Forest Service and the Blue Ridge Parkway all use both chemical and biological controls to stop the adelgid, their cost and sheer number of hemlocks make it impossible to save large portions of the trees.

The Forest Service is able to treat less than 5 percent of the hemlock population on its land in WNC. Great Smoky Mountains National Park has treated about 1,000 acres of trees in conservation areas and another 1,000 near the roadside. The Blue Ridge Parkway has treated about 2,000 trees in its forests.

The agencies have also released beetles that are natural predators of the adelgid into the forests, although there are too many adelgids and not enough beetles. They are also working on getting more species of beetles, which Rhea said is necessary to control the adelgids.

The goal is to try to save some portion of the hemlock population with the chemical treatments. Scientists hope that they can use these stands to repopulate areas that are being lost and that the beetles will keep the future adelgid population in check.

In the future, however, the loss of the hemlocks is going to be coupled with the loss of other tree species as more non-native pests enter the forests in WNC, Rhea said.

“It’s just one thing after another,” he said. “The additive effect of all of these things is going to be catastrophic.”

News notes are courtesy of Southern Forests Network News Notes
www.southernsustainableforests.org


Environmental Groups Ask UN to Oppose Appalachian Coal Mining Practices

Monday, June 18th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

By Carley Petesch
United Nations – A coalition of environmental groups called on the United Nations May 9 to take a stand against ecologically destructive coal mining practices in the Appalachians region of the U.S., saying that the federal and local governments were not paying attention. The groups from Tennessee, West Virginia and Kentucky asked the U.N. Commission on Sustainable Development, which is holding its annual session through Saturday, to shun coal in favor of policies promoting renewable energy and cuts in fossil fuel consumption. The delegation told reporters outside the U.N. that coal extraction has destroyed more than a million acres (400,000 hectares) of forests, 500 mountains and 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) of streams in recent years in the Appalachians. “We need the help of the U.N. to expose and bring an end to coal mining abuses,” said Larry Gibson, a board member of the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition in Huntington, West Virginia.

Bill Caylor, the president of the Kentucky Coal Association, said the group was exaggerating the environmental effects of coal mining.

“We’re helping to develop the region,” he said. “They’re just a very emotional, anti-business group … taking their case to the United Nations, I think, is extremely inappropriate.”

Ann League, vice president of Save Our Cumberland Mountains of Lake City, Tennessee, said the groups were appealing to the U.N. because the U.S. and local governments had failed to address the problem.

More information


Massey shareholders reject global warming proposal

Thursday, June 14th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

Massey shareholders reject global warming proposal
Consol Energy shareholders defeated a similar proposal

NEW YORK (AP) — Massey Energy Co. shareholders rejected a proposal Tuesday that would have asked the Richmond, Va.-based coal company to explain its response to mounting pressure for limits on carbon dioxide emissions.
Based on a preliminary tally of the vote, shareholders also defeated a resolution that would have asked for more disclosure of the corporate political contributions, Chief Executive Don Blankenship said during the company’s annual meeting in New York.
New York City Comptroller William Thompson Jr., who proposed the carbon dioxide measure on behalf of five municipal pension funds, argued that Massey is unprepared if carbon dioxide emissions are restricted.
Massey’s board of directors, however, asked shareholders to defeat the measure, arguing that the company is preparing for the possibility. Among other things, Massey is investing in technology to capture CO2 and other emissions from coal plants.
Consol Energy shareholders defeated a similar proposal at the Pittsburgh-based coal company’s annual meeting May 1.
Massey said shareholders also elected retired accountant Richard Gabrys to the company’s board of directors and re-elected directors Dan Moore and Executive Vice President Baxter Phillips Jr.
Separately, Massey said it hasn’t finished an evaluation of alternatives for improving the value of its stock. The company hired New York investment banking firm Goldman Sachs last October to help.
Massey, the nation’s fourth-largest coal company by revenue, operates 19 mining complexes in Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky. Its stock fell 24 cents, or 0.86 percent, to close at $27.63 Tuesday.
________________
© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Tennessee group part of effort to end mountaintop coal mining

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

Tennessee group part of effort to end mountaintop coal mining

By BILL THEOBALD
Tennessean Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Tennessee-based Save Our Cumberland Mountains is among several environmental groups and coalfield residents lobbying Congress this week for legislation intended to protect water quality while ending the practice of mountaintop removal coal mining.

The Clear Water Protection Act, H.R. 2169, was introduced earlier this month and Rep. Jim Cooper, D-Nashville, is among 67 co-sponsors. It has been referred to the House Transportation Committee.

The environmental groups said mountaintop coal mining has buried 1,000 miles of streams and headwaters in central and southern Appalachia.

They claim the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the federal Environmental Protection Agency created a loophole in 2002 allowing mining operators to dump their waste, filling streams, lakes and wetlands.

Contact Bill Theobald at {encode=”wtheobal@gns.gannett.com” title=”wtheobal@gns.gannett.com”}


JUNE 14TH: Dumping one Ton of Coal in front of U.S. Capitol in Protest of “Coal-to-Liquid” Bill

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

I hope Senator Obama realized that, by supporting coal-to-liquid technology, he’s giving coal companies more incentive to extract more coal in the cheapest way possible: mountaintop removal! The Senator himself is on record as being against MTR. Read all about it here.

MEDIA ADVISORY
Press Conference on Capitol Hill
11:00 a.m., Thursday, June 14th

CONTACT:
Ted Glick, 301.891.6844
Mike Tidwell, 240.460.5838

Campaign Exposes Senator Obama’s Flip-Flop on Climate Change
Activists Dump one Ton of Coal in front of U.S. Capitol in Protest of “Coal-to-Liquid” Bill

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Dozens of activists will dump one ton of raw coal on the U.S. Capitol lawn Thursday to protest Senator Barack Obama’s support for a disastrous coal-to-liquid bill. Representatives of climate and environmental groups will join forces on Thursday, June 14th at 11:00 a.m. in Lower Senate Park on Capitol Hill to call for Sen. Obama and others who say they oppose global warming to drop their support for “coal-to-liquid” legislation being debated in the Senate.

Since Friday, June 8th, over 1,000 concerned Americans from Sen. Obama’s home state of Illinois to the mountains of Kentucky to the coasts of Louisiana have signed an online petition circulated by the U.S. Climate Emergency Council calling for Sen. Obama to show leadership on global warming and stop his support of coal-to-liquid technology.

Coal-to-liquids will make the climate crisis worse. This transportation fuel made from coal would double the global warming pollution coming from our cars, trucks and planes. Moreover, large-scale use of liquid coal would exacerbate the devastating effects of coal mining felt by communities and ecosystems stretching from Appalachia to the Rocky Mountains. At a time when Americans are demanding action on global warming, coal-to-liquid technology is a giant leap in the wrong direction.

WHAT: Press conference protesting dangerous “coal-to-liquid” legislation and calling on Senator Barack Obama and Senate leaders to show leadership on global warming

WHEN: Thursday, June 14 @ 11:00 AM

WHERE: Lower Senate Park, north side of Capitol Building, near the intersection of Louisiana Avenue NW and D Street NW. Call 202-997-2466 or 973-460-1458 for directions.

WHO: Initiated by the Chesapeake Climate Action Network and the U.S. Climate Emergency Council


VIDEO: Someone should take the camera away from Benji

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

Taking YOU TUBE by storm. Who-da thought that just being a hunk would help me spread the word about mountaintop removal coal mining to the world.


Coal removal process abuses human rights

Monday, June 11th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

When we imagine human rights abuses we often see images ranging from restriction of free speech to genocide. What many people fail to realize is that human rights abuses take place in the U.S. every single day. One form of a human rights atrocity that is being committed is mountaintop removal coal mining that is wreaking havoc for the people of Appalachia.

A coal-extraction process that companies have turned to in the name of corporate expedience is decimating the Appalachian Mountains throughout Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia. In order to access the seams of the coal in the mountain, first the forests and topsoil are stripped away. Then, explosives blast up to 1,000 feet off the mountaintops until the coal is exposed. Anything that isn’t coal is dumped into adjacent valleys, in some places up to a depth of 600 feet. To date, mountaintop removal has flattened at least a million acres and buried more than 1,200 miles of biologically crucial Appalachian waterways. The community impacts of mountaintop removal mining are devastating. As forests and vegetation are removed, water cascades down the steep slopes, forming intense flash floods that have devastated towns. So far, flooding in West Virginia has cost $1.5 billion in damages, with taxpayers, not the profiting coal companies, paying for the clean up. If mountaintop removal coal mining is not stopped now, it’s bound to get worse. Even though Appalachia seems far from New York, we must help bring an end to this injustice. For more information and ways to help, please visit www.appvoices.org and www.ilovemountains.org.


Reclaiming MTR sites for Alternate Power

Saturday, June 9th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

Two West Virginia leaders who know a lot about energy and energy needs believe the state can use reclaimed mountaintop removing mining sites for other energy projects.

Both West Virginia Coal Association President Bill Raney and state Consumer Advocate Billy Jack Gregg think it would be a good idea to use the sites for things like wind farms and crops that contribute to alternate fuels.

Raney says, “You would have all of the energy there. It would be great and we are certainly looking around for the opportunities. You would have to go where the wind is blowing of course.”

Gregg says the problem with wind turbines is where to put them so a community will accept them. Gregg says maybe a reclaimed mountaintop removal site would be acceptable. “It would be nice to see the area after it was mined being put to productive use producing clean energy.”

Gregg says the siting of wind turbines will ultimately depend on how much wind blows in which particular area. He says not all areas are equal.

Raney says he hopes choices are made in reclamation to plant switchgrass, that can be used in developing alternative fuels and then build windmills on the same sites. “I think that can happen. You would have it right there. You’re doing biomass, you’re doing wind and the coal.”

Governor Joe Manchin made comments last week supporting using mountaintop removal sites as places to plant corn, soybeans and switchgrass.


New York Times: Will Congress subsidize a new fuel technology with twice the emissions of diesel?

Friday, June 8th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

May 29, 2007

Lawmakers Push for Big Subsidies for Coal Process
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS

WASHINGTON, May 28 – Even as Congressional leaders draft legislation to reduce greenhouse gases linked to global warming, a powerful roster of Democrats and Republicans is pushing to subsidize coal as the king of alternative fuels.

Prodded by intense lobbying from the coal industry, lawmakers from coal states are proposing that taxpayers guarantee billions of dollars in construction loans for coal-to-liquid production plants, guarantee minimum prices for the new fuel, and guarantee big government purchases for the next 25 years.

With both House and Senate Democrats hoping to pass “energy independence” bills by mid-July, coal supporters argue that coal-based fuels are more American than gasoline and potentially greener than ethanol.

“For so many, filthy coal is a dirty four-letter word,” said Representative Nick V. Rahall, Democrat of West Virginia and chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee. “These individuals, I tell you, have their heads buried in the sand.”

Environmental groups are adamantly opposed, warning that coal-based diesel fuels would at best do little to slow global warming and at worst would produce almost twice as much of the greenhouse gases tied to global warming as petroleum.

Coal companies are hardly alone in asking taxpayers to underwrite alternative fuels in the name of energy independence and reduced global warming. But the scale of proposed subsidies for coal could exceed those for any alternative fuel, including corn-based ethanol.

Among the proposed inducements winding through House and Senate committees: loan guarantees for six to 10 major coal-to-liquid plants, each likely to cost at least $3 billion; a tax credit of 51 cents for every gallon of coal-based fuel sold through 2020; automatic subsidies if oil prices drop below $40 a barrel; and permission for the Air Force to sign 25-year contracts for almost a billion gallons a year of coal-based jet fuel.

Coal companies have spent millions of dollars lobbying on the issue, and have marshaled allies in organized labor, the Air Force and fuel-burning industries like the airlines. Peabody Energy, the world’s biggest coal company, urged in a recent advertising campaign that people “imagine a world where our country runs on energy from Middle America instead of the Middle East.”

Representative Rick Boucher, a Virginia Democrat whose district is dominated by coal mining, is writing key sections of the House energy bill. In the Senate, champions of coal-to-liquid fuels include Barack Obama, the Illinois Democrat, Jim Bunning of Kentucky and Larry Craig of Wyoming, both Republicans.

President Bush has not weighed in on specific incentives, but he has often stressed the importance of coal as an alternative to foreign oil. In calling for a 20 percent cut in projected gasoline consumption by 2017, he has carefully referred to the need for “alternative” fuels rather than “renewable” fuels. Administration officials say that was specifically to make room for coal.

The political momentum to subsidize coal fuels is in odd juxtaposition to simultaneous efforts by Democrats to draft global-warming bills that would place new restrictions on coal-fired electric power plants.

The move reflects a tension, which many lawmakers gloss over, between slowing global warming and reducing dependence on foreign oil.

Many analysts say the huge coal reserves of the United States could indeed provide a substitute for foreign oil.

The technology to convert coal into liquid fuel is well-established, and the fuel can be used in conventional diesel cars and trucks, as well as jet engines, boats and ships. Industry executives contend that the fuels can compete against gasoline if oil prices are about $50 a barrel or higher.

But coal-to-liquid fuels produce almost twice the volume of greenhouse gases as ordinary diesel. In addition to the carbon dioxide emitted while using the fuel, the production process creates almost a ton of carbon dioxide for every barrel of liquid fuel.

Coal industry executives insist their fuel can actually be cleaner than oil, because they would capture the gas produced as the liquid fuel is being made and store it underground. Some could be injected into oil fields to push oil to the surface.

Several aspiring coal-to-liquid companies say that they would reduce greenhouse emissions even further by using renewable fuels for part of the process. But none of that has been done at commercial volumes, and many analysts say the economic issues are far from settled.

“There are many uncertainties,” said James T. Bartis, a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation, who testified last week before the Senate Energy Committee. “We don’t even know what the costs are yet.”

The clash between “energy independence” and global warming will break into the open next month. The Senate energy bill, being drafted by Senator Jeff Bingaman, Democrat of New Mexico, would promote renewable fuels – but not coal-to-liquid fuels – and would require electric utilities to produce 15 percent of their power with renewable fuels by 2020.

But coal-state Republicans have vowed to resume their push for coal incentives when the bill reaches the Senate floor, and many Democrats are likely to support them. In the House, Democrats like Mr. Boucher and Mr. Rahall will be pushing in the same direction.

But some energy experts, as well as some lawmakers, worry that the scale of the coal-to-liquid incentives could lead to a repeat of a disastrous effort 30 years ago to underwrite a synthetic fuels industry from scratch.

When oil prices plunged in the 1980s, the government-owned Synthetic Fuels Corporation became a giant government albatross that lost billions and remains a symbol of misguided industrial policy more than 25 years later.

“This is the snake oil of energy alternatives,” said Peter Altman, a policy analyst at the National Environmental Trust, an environmental advocacy group. “The promises are just as lofty and the substance is just as absent as the first snake oil salesmen who plied their trade in the 1800s.”

Coal executives contend that the technology for converting coal to “ultraclean” diesel fuel for use in cars and trucks has been around for decades. Known as the Fischer-Tropsch process, the technology dates to the 1920s. It was used by Germany during World War II and by South Africa during the apartheid era, in both cases because the countries were blocked by international embargoes from buying oil.

SASOL, a South African chemical conglomerate, is the world’s largest producer of coal-based liquids and operates a plant that produces 150,000 barrels a day.

“Greener and cleaner – we can do it, and we will do it,” said John Baardson, president of Baard Energy, a firm in Vancouver, Wash., that is trying to build a $4 billion coal-to-liquid plant in Ohio.

But no company has built a commercial-scale plant that also captures carbon, and experts caution that many obstacles lie ahead.

“At best, you’re going to tread water on the carbon issue, and you’re probably going to do worse,” said Howard Herzog, a principal research engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a co-author of “The Future of Coal,” a voluminous study published in March by M.I.T. “It goes against the whole grain of reducing carbon.”

The M.I.T. team expressed even more skepticism about the economic risks. It estimated that it would cost $70 billion to build enough plants to replace 10 percent of American gasoline consumption.

The study estimates that the construction costs for coal-to-liquid plants are almost four times higher than the costs for comparable petroleum refineries, and it argues that cost estimates for synthetic fuel plants in the past turned out to be “wildly optimistic.”

In a new report last week, the Energy Department estimated that a plant capable of making 50,000 barrels of liquefied coal a day – a tiny fraction of the nearly 9 million barrels in gasoline burned daily in the United States – would cost $4.5 billion.

But the Energy Department also estimated that such a plant could produce a 20 percent annual return if oil prices remain about $60 a barrel.

Coal executives say that they need government help primarily because oil prices are so volatile and the upfront construction costs are so high. “We’re not asking for everything. All we’re asking for is something,” said Hunt Ramsbottom, chief executive of Rentech Inc., which is trying to build two plants at mines owned by Peabody Energy.

But coal executives anticipate potentially huge profits. Gregory H. Boyce, chief executive of Peabody Energy, based in St. Louis, which has $5.3 billion in sales, told an industry conference nearly two years ago that the value of Peabody’s coal reserves would skyrocket almost tenfold, to $3.6 trillion, if it sold all its coal in the form of liquid fuels.

Coal industry lobbying has reached a fever pitch. The industry spent $6 million on federal lobbying in 2005 and 2006, three times what it spent each year from 2000 through 2004, according to calculations by Politicalmoneyline.com.

Peabody, which has quadrupled its annual lobbying budget to about $2 million since 2004, recently hired Richard A. Gephardt, the Missouri Democrat who was House majority leader from 1989 to 1995 and a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988 and 2004, to help make its case in Congress.

One of the most vociferous champions of coal-to-liquid fuels is the Southern States Energy Board, a group organized by governors from 16 states. Last year, the group published a study, which cost $500,000, that concluded that coal-to-liquid fuel could and should replace almost one-third of imported oil by 2030.

As it happens, the coal industry supplied much of the financing for the study and subsequent marketing. Peabody Energy contributed about $150,000 and the National Mining Association added $50,000, officials at the Southern States Energy Board said.

The inducements under discussion would not only subsidize up to 10 coal-to-liquid plants, but also guarantee a minimum market through long-term contracts with the Air Force and minimum prices for at least some producers.

“There is financial uncertainty, which is inhibiting the flow of private capital into the construction of coal-to-liquid facilities,” said Mr. Boucher, who supports most of the proposals and is drafting portions of the energy bill.

In addition to construction loan guarantees, Mr. Boucher would protect the first six liquid plants from drops in energy prices. If oil prices fell below about $40 a barrel, the government would automatically grant loans to the first six plants that make coal-based fuels. If oil prices climbed to $80 a barrel, companies would have to pay a surcharge to the government.

But the most important guarantee, many coal producers said, is the prospect of signing 25-year purchase contracts with the Air Force.

The Air Force consumes about 2.6 billion gallons a year of jet fuel, and Air Force officials would like to switch as much as 780 million gallons a year to coal-based fuels. Air Force officials strongly support the idea of extremely long contracts, but others at the Defense Department worry that the military could be left holding the bag for years if oil prices dropped significantly.

For Mr. Boyce, chief executive of Peabody Energy, there is no reason to be timid.
“If America has the will to be one of the great energy centers of the world,” he told an industry conference last year, “we have the resources right under our feet.”


Roanoke Times editorial: Rick Boucher and Nick Rahall wrong for supporting coal-to-liquid fuel

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 | Posted by Jeff Deal | No Comments

This Roanoke Times editorial today discusses Virginia’s Rick Boucher and West Virginia’s Nick Rahall’s support of coal-to-liquid technology . . .

https://www.roanoke.com/editorials/wb/wb/xp-119477



 

 


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