by Darren
14. July 2009 16:37
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Coal Wins Round 1 |
Coal and natural gas are squaring off in the Senate and coal clearly has the upper hand. Most of this upper hand is attributed to cost.
As a result, the coal industry is lobbying to stall the House's plan to cap greenhouse gas emissions. With the cap imposed, carbon emissions will need to be captured or otherwise removed. The high cost of doing this may well steal away coal's cost advantage over natural gas and its other competitors.
At least for now, though, coal is unquestionably the most economical alternative.
Sources:
The New York Times
by Darren
14. July 2009 16:20
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72 Workers Affected |
Alliance Resource Partners LP cited lower demand as the reason for idling the unit. The continuous mining unit is one of four at the Van Lear mine in Kentucky.
Sources:
Reuters
by Darren
25. June 2009 09:16
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Will this have the answer? |
The Tennessee Valley Authority is set to release the study which was performed by Bill Walton, a third-party engineering consultant. Massive scrutinization will ensue.
Sources:
The Washington Post
by Darren
24. June 2009 14:34
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Blankenship Challenges Hansen |
Last Saturday a Hollywood actress and a NASA scientist appeared along with a few hundred other protesters deep in southern West Virginia to protest coal mining. Of course, the protest had to take place at the doorstep of an operational mine owned by Massey where a couple of hundred mining supporters stood. Luckily, the outcome of this inherently dangerous event was better than it could have been.
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The volatility of the atmosphere was evident throughout the protest. The frustrations exhibited included cursing, name-calling, stopping traffic by sitting in the main road, and one arrest for battery.
Prior to the protest, Massey CEO Don Blankenship invited a debate with Dr. James Hansen, a NASA scientist who was among those arrested last Saturday. To our knowledge this request remains unanswered.
Sources:
The Register Herald
by Darren
15. June 2009 16:28
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Budget overrun overstated. |
The Illinois-based FutureGen project is back! Reasons why include: stimulus money, an Illinois-born president along with other, unnamed advisers also from Illinois, and an administration that is promoting "clean energy" as one of its core goals.
We just hope that their math is a bit better this time. Or does that really even make a difference? What do you think?
Read about it @ BNET Energy.
by Darren
11. March 2009 21:52
If you are to err, err on the side of caution. Just try not to err $500 million on the side of caution.
This is the size of the "math error" committed by The Energy Department in its cost analysis of the FutureGen coal plant, a mistake which ultimately led to the shelving of the project.
What makes this error even more psycho is that it seems to be based on an assumption by the Department of Energy that the construction costs for the plant would possibly double during the time of construction. Once again, we here at Coal Energy Now may not be math majors, but we can state quite confidently that inflation will not go up by 100% in the time that it takes to build FutureGen.
The project's restoration is under consideration by Secretary of Energy Steven Chu.
Source:
Gaffe could revise plans for innovative coal plant at Google News.
by Darren
9. March 2009 11:59
The United States' transition away from coal energy has begun.
Permits for new coal plants are being denied and many that were in production are being abandoned. With the Energy Department forecasting a 22% increase in power usage in the next 20 years, it is obvious that the vast majority of this increased power will come from alternative sources. This is further evidenced by the $16.8 billion of stimulus allocated for renewable energy compared to the relatively paltry amount of $3.4 billion for clean coal technologies.
Chris Morrison of BNET Energy contends that it would be wise for environmentalists to allow the construction of new plants with better emission-control technologies on the condition that older plants with antiquated technology be closed. While it is true that new plants are considerably cleaner, the general consensus is that "clean coal" technology, which includes carbon capture and sequestration, will not be readily available for at least another decade. It would be more costly to build new plants that would have to be either shut down or overhauled completely in order to implement CCS technology after just ten years. Factor in the exorbitant expense of implementing carbon capture technology and the prospect of building a coal-fired plant becomes financial suicide.
Still, despite the block against new plants, very few existing coal-fired power plants that are in operation have been shut down. With over half of the nation's energy derived from these plants, it is easy to see why.
However, once laws are enacted that impose costly fines against coal producers for carbon dioxide emissions these existing coal factories will certainly begin to diminish. As renewable energy becomes more efficient and reliable the dwindling profits of the coal energy factories will be squeezed further by the new competition.
For better or worse, the transition has certainly begun.
Sources:
Companies rethink coal plants from USA Today.
Coal plants checked by enviro campaigns, costs from The Washington Post.
Cost is Chief Barrier to Clean Coal from The New York Times.
Time for Environmentalists to Compromise on Coal from BNET Energy.
by Darren
24. February 2009 18:25
74 people are now confirmed dead at the Tunlan coal mine in Shanxi province, China, and 114 miners are still hospitalized.
The explosion occurred after an apparent failure of the ventilation system.
Read the Associated Press story on Google News.
by Darren
24. February 2009 09:31
The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal from the Bush Administration's Environmental Protection Agency regarding the exemption of coal-fired power plants from the Clean Air Act. According to The New York Times this effectively paves the way for new regulations on emissions from the coal plants.
by Darren
22. February 2009 15:43
Remember former country-crooner turned environmental evangelist Ashley Judd? Those of us here in the Appalachians are certainly familiar with her.
We at the Coal Energy Now team invite you to enjoy the melodrama Mrs. Judd seems born to exude as evidenced by the sappy dialog filling this video. Lines with too many words spoken slowly like the mountains dying "so fast, my friends, so shockingly fast" and other frenzy-inducing phrases.
You can thank us later.