"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
QUOTE: Originally posted by TerminalTower If we really belive in capitilism,,,Then the efficiancys of western coal and alternitive fuels will be translated into ecommic prospertys elsewere in the economy such as computers and higher education
Collin ,operator of the " Eastern Kentucky & Ohio R.R."
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal For the record, it is technically cheaper to process strip-mined PRB coal into a higher BTU/low moisture product than it is to mine Eastern US underground coal. The reason is that PRB coals are so cheap to begin with relative to Eastern coals, that the added costs of processing PRB coals into higher value coal products is still less expensive than raw Eastern coals. The big problem with such synthetic coals is an inability to transport the product in regular coal gons due to spontaneous combustion of the product. If and when that problem is ever worked out, "value-added" PRB coal products will be less expensive per mmBtu than Appalachian coals.
QUOTE: Originally posted by TerminalTower The Economy will asorb them elsewhere. If we really belive in capitilism,,,Then the efficiancys of western coal and alternitive fuels will be translated into ecommic prospertys elsewere in the economy such as computers and higher education
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
QUOTE: Originally posted by mersenne6 There is another aspect to the strip vs coal shaft issue and that is the impact on the environment. In addition to making the terrain a little lower, the act of stripping tears open the layer above the coal and then dumps it back. The problem with this disturbed layer of overburden is that now, when water percolates through it, you get mine acid drainage. With the moisture in the east the results are easy to see all through the Pennsylvania/Kentucky/WV region - bright reddish brown stream beds with a high pH level. Interestingly enough the acid doesn't do anything to fish eggs, they will hatch just fine. The problem is that the acid kills off almost everything else so your hatchlings starve to death. Out west, with the drier climate, disturbed overburden doesn't get a chance to do what it does in the east.
QUOTE: Originally posted by rdganthracite QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal For the record, it is technically cheaper to process strip-mined PRB coal into a higher BTU/low moisture product than it is to mine Eastern US underground coal. The reason is that PRB coals are so cheap to begin with relative to Eastern coals, that the added costs of processing PRB coals into higher value coal products is still less expensive than raw Eastern coals. The big problem with such synthetic coals is an inability to transport the product in regular coal gons due to spontaneous combustion of the product. If and when that problem is ever worked out, "value-added" PRB coal products will be less expensive per mmBtu than Appalachian coals. That might be true at the mine head but it is hardly true when you factor in the delivery cost. My son works at a power plant in Ohio. The Wyoming coal is substantially more expensive on a per ton basis than is the local Ohio and West Virginia coal. When you consider per BTU the Wyoming coal is outrageously expensive. The PRB coal is only used to bring the total sulfer content down to legal limits. If it were not for the regulations, the power company would not bother with it. Additionally, the Wyoming coal very often is already on fire when it arrives at the power plant. The first thing the employees must do is spread it out and douse it with water. Only then can it be put into the feed bins. That simply adds more expense to the use of the Wyoming coal, which of course causes the electric rates to be just that much higher.
QUOTE: Originally posted by paulstecyna21 and what about coal that is in the appalachians of pennsylvania?
Five out of four people have trouble with fractions. -AnonymousThree may keep a secret, if two of them are dead. -Benjamin Franklin "You don't have to be Jeeves to love butlers, but it helps." (Followers of Levi's Real Jewish Rye will get this one) -Ed K "A potted watch never boils." -Ed Kowal If it's not fun, why do it ? -Ben & Jerry
"I Often Dream of Trains"-From the Album of the Same Name by Robyn Hitchcock
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