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American Electric Power operating unit Appalachian Power has
received authority from the Public Service Commission of West
Virginia to build a 629-megawatt Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle (IGCC) electric generating plant in West
Virginia.
The plant will be located beside the company's existing
Mountaineer Plant near New Haven, WV, and will cost an estimated
$2.23 billion. From the time construction begins, it will
require approximately 48 to 54 months to complete the IGCC
unit. In addition to the Mountaineer unit, AEP has proposed to
build a similar 629-megawatt unit in Ohio. IGCC technology
converts coal into a synthetic gas that moves through
pollutant-removal equipment before the gas is burned in a
combined-cycle gas turbine to produce electricity.
The
Alaska Miners Association has released a survey that shows 3,500
Alaskans are directly employed in mining jobs in 2007
and another 2,000 employed indirectly. The average annual
industry wage stood at $80,000 in 2007, 90 percent higher than
the state average. Alaska's mining industry had a direct and
indirect payroll of $340 million and generated $175 million in
state government revenue and $14 million in local government
revenue. The state's mines produced $3.4 billion worth of coal,
gold, silver, zinc and construction materials and accounted for
27 percent of Alaska's total exports in 2007. (See Alaska Mining
Economic Impacts).
Joy
Global Inc., Milwaukee, WI, has completed its acquisition of
N.E.S. Investment Co. and its subsidiary, Continental Global
Group, Inc.,
provider of conveyor systems for bulk material handling in
mining and industrial applications. Continental, with 2007
sales of approximately $340 million, designs, manufactures,
installs and services highly engineered conveyor systems for
customers on six continents and has manufacturing facilities in
the U.S., United Kingdom, South Africa and Australia.
GE
Energy, Atlanta, GA, has signed a letter of intent with the
University of Wyoming and Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal for
the development of an advanced gasification research and
technology center in Wyoming.
The proposed center would consists of a small-scale gasification
system that would enable the University of Wyoming and GE
researchers to develop advanced gasification technology
solutions for Power River Basin (PRB) and other Wyoming coals.
GE is a leader in cleaner coal integrated gasification combined
cycle (IGCC) and gasification technology, which as been
operating at the 230-megawatt TECO Polk I Station in Florida for
more than 10 years. The company currently offers a 630-megawatt
commercial-scale plant that produces 75 percent less Sox, 33
percent less water than a pulverized coal plant. Utilities in
the eastern U.S. (Duke Energy, AEP and others) have committed to
using GE's IGCC technology in proposed projects.
Utah
coal production is up 20 percent over the past two years with an
output of 26.1 million tons,
according to Annual Review and Forecast of Utah Coal Production
and Distribution 2006. The report adds that the increased is
the result of longwall mining at the Skyline mine and
significant production increases at Aberdeen, West Ridge and
SUFCO. In addition, Utah achieved record production in the Book
Cliffs coal field, at Carbon County and on state lands. The
Wasatch Plateau led the way with 59.4 percent of the state’s
total production last year. Total production for 2007,
according to the report, is expected to total 26.4 Mt and a new
state record of 28 Mt possibly for 2008.
National Coal Corp., Knoxville, TN, a coal producer in central
and southern Appalachia, has agreed to sell its Kentucky assets
to Xinergy Corp.
for $11 million in cash. Jon Nix, founder and major shareholder
of National Coal, controls Xinergy.
Large-scale commercial implementation of clean
coal-burning technology is like five to 10 years away in the U.S.
and could suffer delays due to the government's move to pull the
pull on FutureGen, says Peabody Energy Corp. Chief Executive
Gregory Boyce. After a site was selected at Mattoon, IL, Boyce
said that he and other investors had thought it was about to
start. Peabody Energy is part of a 13-memnber FutureGen
Alliance that included U.S. utilities and coal producers, along
with international producers Anglo American, BHP Billiton and
China's Huaneng Group.
Longwall Associates Inc., Chilhowie, VA, an original equipment
manufacturer, has a contract to deliver a full longwall face
conveyor system to Micare Mine in Mexico.
A second contract is underway for a full AFC system from SAADEC
Daning Mine in Shanxi Province, China. The armored face
conveyor, beam stage loader, crusher and CMT will be delivered
to Micare this summer with trials scheduled at the Chilhowie
location early this year. Longwall Associates occupies more
than 25 percent of the U.S. longwall conveyor market, with
additional contracts in Australia and China.
Dominion Virginia Power, St. Paul, VA, is proposing a $1.6
billion coal-fired power plant,
which is currently under review by the Virginia Department of
Environmental Quality. The construction phase of the Virginia
City Hybrid Energy Center would create 800 jobs for economically
depressed southwest Virginia. It could support more than 250
coal-mining jobs once it was on line in 2012. The plant would
employ 75 people. Dominion plans to use advanced technology to
burn cleaner coal and will burn only coal mines in Virginia, as
well as coal waste and wood products.
Integrated Power Services, Greenville, SC, prominent in the
service and repair of electric motors and mechanical power
transmission components, has acquired Electro-Mec of Indiana,
PA,
which offers motor and mechanical repair, new product sales,
field services and precision-machined products. IPS has twelve
regional service centers across the country. Electro-Mec will
operate as an IPS company.
Fuel
Frontiers, Inc., a subsidiary of Nuclear Solutions, Inc., has
met with Westinghouse Plasma
and Shaw, Stone & Webster in Washington, DC, to lay groundwork
for a 400-ton per day coal-to-ultra clean diesel fuel production
facility in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky.
Sunflower Electric Power Corp. has received approval from the
Kansas House to build two large-coal burning generators
at its existing plant, near Holcomb, KS. A state regulator
rejected the project last year, citing climate-change concerns.
However, passage of the bill, SB 327, would strip the power the
official used to block the plant and allow Sunflower to try
again.
Foundation Coal has acquired 49 percent interest in Target
Drilling Inc.,
Jefferson Hills, PA, known for its in-mine as well as surface
horizontal directional drilling for develpment and coal seam
methane gas capture. The driller plans to add more than 20
employees to its current staff of 60 by the end of the year and
improve equipment capabilities.
Tenaska Inc., Omaha, NB, has proposed a $3 billion conventional
600-MW coal-fired power plant with the ability to capture carbon
dioxide emissions in Sweetwater, Texas.
Approval of The Trailblazer Energy Center won't be known until
2009, depending on financial incentive, construction costs and
projected market prices for electricity and carbon dioxide. Tenaska has filed an air permit application with Texas
regulators.
American Electric Power, Columbus, OH, has sold four inactive
generating plants
owned by its AEP Texas North Generation Company LLC subsidiary
to Eagle Construction and Environmental Services, LP. The
plants, which have not operated since 2004, had a total
generating capacity of 656 megawatts and had produced
electricity from natural gas or oil.
The
market for exports of U.S.-made construction machinery closed
out 2007 with a gain of more than 26 percent compared to the
previous year, for a total of $17.2 billion
worth of equipment sold worldwide, according to the Association
of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM). Africa led the way in 2007
with a 67-percent gain in export purchases, for a total of $1.1
billion. Exports to Asia grew 57 percent and totaled $2.4
billion, while Europe took delivery of $2.8 billion, a 50
percent gain. Countries buying the most U.S.-made construction
machinery in 2007 were: Canada, $5.5 billion; Australia, $1.5
billion; Mexico, $1.1 billion; and Chile $675 million.
Foundation Coal of Maryland has purchased the Eagle Butte
surface operation in Wyoming for $80.5 million.
The lease encompasses about 255 million minable tons on 1400
acres of land and is classified as +8400 Btu. Foundation also
owns the Bell Ayr surface complex near Gillette. The Eagle Butte
Mine produced 25 Mt of coal in 2007 using a truck and shovel
mining method.
Continental Global Group has been renamed Continental Crushing
and Conveying,
following its purchase by Joy Global. The newly named division
will join P&H Mining Equipment and Joy Mining Machinery as one
of Joy Global's three business segments. Terry Nicola will
serve as president of the entity. The name change stems from
Joy's decision to include its Stamler surface crushers and
underground feeder breakers as part of the Continental Crushing
and Conveying division.
Technogenia Inc., Atlanta, GA, has opened a new office in
Atlanta
to develop its business in North America. Technogenia offers a
wide range of anti-abrasion materials to keep industrial parts
strong in such hard-wear applications as oil drilling, mining,
foundry, aluminum, iron and steel industries.
Saft,
a designer and manufacturer of high-tech batteries, Valdese, NC,
has been selected to power MineTracer,
a wireless miner tracking and communication system developed by
Venture Design Services, Inc. Utilizing Saft's (IS) MP 174865
IS battery, MineTracer is the first underground miner tracking
system approved by MSHA. MineTracer is completely reliant on
power from Saft's single cell batteries, installed in the
system’s Wireless Access Point.
World
coal consumption is about 6.2 billion tons annually, of which
about 75 percent is used for the production of electricity.
China produced 2.36 billion tons in 2006 and India produced
about 447.3 million tons in 2006. 83.2 percent of China’s
electricity comes from coal. The U.S. consumes about 1,053
billion tons of coal each year, using 90 percent of it for
generation of electricity.
The
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
will provide free, confidential health screenings to working
underground coal miners
in 16 counties throughout West Virginia this year to provide
early detection of coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, or "black
lung". The screenings will be provided through a NIOSH mobile
testing van at locations. First visit is scheduled for April
7-19 in Randolph, Upshur, Webster, Nicholas, and Fayette
Counties, WV. All working underground coal miners are eligible
for chest x-ray screening at no cost to them. For more
information visit
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/surveillance/ORDS/ecwhsp.html
Or call 888/480-4042.
Global Parts Solution LLC, Tucson, AZ, announces a newly
redesigned website
at
www.gotogps.com The website is open to list and
buy machines, components, parts, and dismantled machines. Over
1,000,000 parts are online for review.
The
Prairie State Energy Campus air permit process has been
successfully concluded.
Prairie State is a 1,600-megawatt supercritical coal-fueled
power plant being built in Washington County, IL, that would be
among the cleanest U.S. plants with emission rates that are
approximately 80 percent lower than existing U.S. power plants.
The mine and power plant will create more than 500 permanent
jobs and will inject nearly $125 million into the region each
year. Units 1 and 2 are expected to be online in the 2011-2012
timeframe. It will deliver low-cost energy to more than 1.7
million families.
The
first pilot project that uses chilled ammonia to capture carbon
dioxide from coal-fueled power plants has commenced operation,
reports Alstom, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and
We Energies. Alstom designed, constructed and will operate the
1.7-megawatt system that captures CO2 from a portion of
coal-fired boiler flue gas at We Energies Pleasant Prairie Power
Plant, a 1,210-megawatt coal-fired generating station. The
demonstration project will provide the opportunity to test the
process on a large scale and to evaluate the potential to remove
CO2 while reducing the energy used in the process.
ADA-ES, Inc., Littleton, CO, announces it has successfully
completed the first full-scale tests of its chemically treated
activated carbon (AC)
that it intends to sell to coal-fired power plants for reducing
mercury emissions. ADA produced its first batches of AC in
January and has completed the first performance tests of the
product at a power plant burning Western PRB coal. While
operating with ADA's AC, it was possible to reduce mercury
emissions by greater than 90 percent at a very competitive feed
rate.
Glen
Raven, Inc., a specialty fabrics maker, Logan, WV, announces
that R.J. Stern, a wholly owned subsidiary of John Boyle
Company, will join the company’s technical fabrics division.
Stern fabricates and markets Minemaster ventilation brattice and
other products for the mining industry. Glen Raven recently
announced that John Boyle's Statesville plant, which
manufactures Minemaster, will also become part of Glen Raven
Technical Fabrics. The John Boyle Company was acquired by Glen
Raven in May 2007.
American Electric Power, Columbus, OH, named one of the "100
best corporate citizens" for 2008
by CRO (Corporate Responsibility Officer) magazine. Large-cap
companies in the Russell 1000 index were ranked based on their
efforts and performance in these areas: climate change, employee
relations, environment, financial, governance, human rights,
lobbying and philanthropy. AEP ranks 69th on this
year's list.
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Ecublens, Switzerland, has added
an OES and X-ray Product Demonstration Center to its training
institute in West Palm Beach, FL.
The center will give customers the opportunity to evaluate
Thermo Scientific Optical Emission (OES), Energy Dispersive
X-ray Fluorescence and Wavelength Dispersive X-ray Fluorescence
systems. These innovative systems ensure stability, precision
and reproducibility of results while achieving low detection
limits. Training courses are available.
The
Buchanan County coal mine was expected to be in full production
last March,
following repairs made after a series of roof falls last year.
Workers are at four of the sections and the mine's longwall
mining equipment has moved to another area of the mine. The
mine has 520 workers and is the largest coal mine in Virginia.
Cherokee Mining, Jasper, AL, has been granted permits to begin
surface mining at Segco Mine Number 1,
about one mile from Shelby County 270 and Shelby County 91. The
nearly 1,300 acre site could produce as much as one million tons
of coal annually. The mine will create 104 jobs and 35 spinoff
jobs.
Virginia has 1.5 billion tons of minable and merchantable coal
in its southwest,
the majority of which is deep mine reserves, according to the
Virginia Coal and Energy Research Dept. There are more than
30,000 people either working in mines or supporting the coal
industry in southwest Virginia, the major income-generating
business in this area.
A.L.
Lee Corp., Lester, WV, manufacturer that specializes in
personnel carriers, stone duster, utility vehicles, shelters and
other products for the underground coal mining industry, has
signed a letter of intent of forming a merger
with Bluefield Gear & Machine and IPM Technologies. Bluefield
Gear and IPM are located in the former Eimco headquarters in the
old Coppinger Machine building in Brushfork.
MSHA
has launched a new feature on its web site that provides
additional tools for mine safety stakeholders to assess safety
performance
at specific mines around the nation. The addition to MSHA's
existing Data Retrieval system (DRS) is designed to enable users
to access specific data about violations per inspection day and
repeat violations of the same standards. Visit
www.msha.gov/drs/drshome.htm
Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO), a unit of American
Electric Power, has begun commercial operation of two new
85-megawatt peaking generation units at Southwestern Station
(SWS), near Anadarko, OK. The addition of 170 MW of peaking
capacity at Southwestern increases the plant's total generation
capacity to 608 MW. Two more 85 MW peaking units are in the
final stages of testing at PSO's Riverside Station in Jenks, OK,
and are expected to be commercially available immediately
Peabody Energy, St. Louis, MO., has been named first in the
Mining and Crude Oil Industries in Fortune Magazine's "Most
Admired Companies"
ranking of U.S. companies. Peabody held the number one score in
every category including Innovation, People Management, Use of
Corporate Assets, Social Responsibility, Quality of Management,
Financial Soundness, Long-term Investment and Product/Services
Quality. Peabody Energy outpaced a group of leading U.S. mining
and energy companies.
Canada's Crown Corporation and SaskPower announce plans for a
seven-year, $1.4 billion clean coal carbon sequestration
demonstration project,
involving SaskPower's coal-fired power generation units at
Boundary Dam, near Estevan. The project will produce 100
megawatts of power with zero greenhouse gas emissions, reducing
Crown's emissions by about one mega-ton a year. Construction is
expected to start in 2011.
Cherokee Mining LLC, a subsidiary of Twin Pines Coal Co.,
Jasper, AL, has permits approved to begin coal mining
on its 1,291-acre site, that's projected to produce one million
tons of coal a year. Surface mining will commence at the Segco
Mine No. 1.
Utilities have canceled or put on hold at least 45 coal plants
in development this past year,
according to a new analysis by the US Department of Energy’s
National Energy Technology Laboratory in Pittsburgh. The
industry has had more than 150 such plants in development.
Natural gas and renewable power projects have moved ahead of
coal in the development, according to Global Energy Decisions,
Boulder, CO. Gas and renewables each show more than 70,000
megawatts under development compared with about 66,000 megawatts
in the coal-power pipeline.
Liebherr America Inc., Newport News, VA, has expanded its
exclusive licensing and technical information alliance with
Immersive Technologies, Sandy, UT,
to include the company's range of hydraulic mining excavators
and shovels. This follows the alliance signed in 2005 for the
Immersive T282B simulator representing one of the world's
largest haul trucks. Liebherr will work with Immersive
Technologies to develop training simulators for the Liebherr
range of excavator and shovels. The first Liebherr mining
excavator represented in a simulator is the current flag ship,
the R 996. Other models will follow.
U.S.
Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman announces a restructured
approach to its FutureGen project
that aims to
demonstrate cutting-edge carbon capture and storage (CCS)
technology at multiple commercial-scale Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle (IGCC) clean coal power plants. Under this
strategy, DOE will join industry in its efforts to build IGCC
plants by providing funding for the addition of CCS technology
to multiple plants that will be operational by 2015. This
approach builds on technological research and development
advancements in IGCC and CCS technology achieved over the past
five years and is expected to at least double the amount of
carbon dioxide sequestered compared to the concept announces in
2003.
The
Department of Energy's Office of Fossil Energy FY 2009 coal
budget request of $648 million focuses on technology
allowing the U.S. to maintain its technological lead in coal use
in a way that will not raise climate concerns. This is the
largest budget request for coal research development and
demonstration in over 25 years and leverages a nearly $1 billion
investment in Clean Coal Technology. The budget includes
$406.5 million for Coal R&D, including in-house R&D; $85 million
for the Clean Coal Power Initiative and $156 million for a new
approach to the FutureGen program.
Holmbury Ltd, Mentor, OH, is observing its 25th
anniversary in business.
David French founded Holmbury in 1983, producing hydraulic quick
disconnect couplings and hydraulic components. Holmbury has a
central warehouse and headquarters in Great Britain and
distribution outlets worldwide. Its North American operations
and central warehouse is located in Mentor. Holmbury
specializes in flat face couplings and offers an exclusive
one-year warranty against leakage. A complete catalog of
products is listed online at
www.holmburyUSA.com
or call 866/465-6287.
The
Fraser Institute, Toronto, ON, has created the Global Centre for
Mining Studies to conduct research into public policy and the
economic, environmental and social impacts of mining.
The centre will undertake fact-based research on policy
frameworks that can deliver the greatest economic and social
benefit to those affected by mining while maintaining a
profitable industry that continues to invest and create
opportunity. The centre will examine issues related to best
practices in developing projects to the benefit of the local
economy.
American Electric Power, Columbus, OH, announces that the
Potomac-Appalachian Transmission Highline (PATH), AEP's
transmission joint venture with Allegheny Energy, received
approval
from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for transmission
incentives to help support construction of the approximately
290-mile, extra-high voltage transmission line from West
Virginia into Maryland. The PATH project includes approximately
244 miles of 765-kilovolt extra-high voltage transmission from
AEP's Amos substation near St. Albans, WV, to Allegheny's Bedington substation, northeast of Martinsburg, WV. Another 46
miles of twin-circuit 500 kV transmission will be constructed
from Bedington to a new substation to be built near Kemptown,
southeast of Frederick , MD. Total project is estimated to cost
approximately $1.8 billion.
Massey Energy Company, Charleston, WV, announces that Aracoma
Coal Company is the recipient of Massey Energy's Bradbury Safety
Award.
Miners at Aracoma achieved no lost time accidents and a
non-fatal days lost (NFDL) rate of 0.00. In 2007, Aracoma
miners worked over 574,000 hours, while completing numerous
large projects throughout the year without injury. Aracoma
miners removed two longwall miner systems from the Alma mine and
worked on other major construction projects. Massey Energy also
achieved its best safety performance it its history during 2007
by recording a non-fatal days lost rate of 2.05, which bettered
the industry average of 3.31. Last year's winner of the
Bradbury Award, West Cazy Surface Mine, also continues to set
the standard for companies like Aracoma. In 2007, West Cazy
again achieved a 0.00 NFDL rate, extending to 1135 days the
number of days through the end of 2007 that the miners have
worked without a lost time accident.
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