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October 12, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

Sometimes we can spend so much time at a place that it seems alive. That’s certainly how I felt when it came to the Joppa Generating Station in southern Illinois, a coal-fired power plant that I worked at as the station chemist for 23 years. Earlier this year, I stood aghast and watched my old friend, a reliable titan of the energy industry, breathe her last – destroyed by the Sierra Club, regulators driven by misguided ideology, and greedy executives who saw an opportunity to leverage that ideology to force Americans into one of the most radical and costly economic transformations in world history; the change from reliable low cost fossil fuels to unreliable high cost wind and solar.  

During my two decades at Joppa, my crew and I monitored her boiler water and steam chemistry like a physician does a patient’s blood. I personally climbed over her turbines and into her boiler components any time maintenance was performed, checking for any hint of poor health. I was a small cog in a larger machine of workers who kept her running at almost full capacity, in every kind of weather, for 62 years.

Joppa delivered cheap, reliable, and safe electricity to tens of thousands of families from the time she was commissioned in 1956. The longer I worked there, the more I was amazed by the feat of engineering she represented – the visionaries who designed the plant still used slide-rules, and drew up the plans by hand.

In the early 1950s, the Department of Defense (DOD) summoned the CEOs of several utilities, normally fierce competitors, to Washington, D.C. DOD officials convinced these men that, since the Cold War was in full swing, they should work together to build the generating station. The new power plant’s purpose would be to supply the massive amounts of electricity needed for a Uranium Enrichment plant being built simultaneously across the river in Paducah, Kentucky, to support the nation’s nuclear arsenal. The plant would be the largest in the United States at that time and would be designed to military specifications for toughness and reliability. Notwithstanding that in the coming decades her size would be surpassed by newer plants, Joppa’s reliability was rarely exceeded.

American steel, two inches thick in some places, made up her core. She had mechanical design features that had been perfected in WWII and that would operate almost continually for half a century. Yet, she was flexible. Over her life, her caretakers changed the fuel she used and the way it was burned, among many other features, to make her compliant with the never-ending onslaught of environmental regulations.

Local news stories decried the lost jobs that would result from her closing, but that’s a fraction of the price that will now be paid. As recent experience in California and Texas, as well as in Europe, has already demonstrated, the rapid reduction in the number of coal-fueled plants threatens the reliability of electricity supplies, threatening millions with blackouts. In contrast, coal-fired plants, with their on-site, 90-day supply of fuel, operate in the coldest polar vortex or the most intense heat wave. The death of the Joppa Generating Station, and the deaths of dozens of other coal plants, will be felt by the nation when rolling blackouts soon become the norm if the Biden administration’s suicidal green energy policies are not soon reversed.

October 12, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

The threat of a railroad strike is back after a major rail union’s rank-and-file members reject a tentative agreement.

Railroads move about 30 percent of the nation’s freight, but about 90 percent of West Virginia’s coal, so a strike could have a huge effect on the Mountain State.

The U.S.’s third largest railroad union has rejected a deal renewing the possibility of a strike that could cripple the economy and supply chain. Both sides plan a return to the bargaining table before that happens.

October 4, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association 2 Comments

WASHINGTON, DC — If you ring up the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics and ask how many coal jobs there are remaining in the United States, they will invariably tell you there are about 53,000. However, independent studies show this number to be ridiculously low.
The argument is also that the coal industry has become relatively insignificant economically, with U.S. coal industry employment declining from a half-million in 1950 to currently only about fifty-three thousand. Critics of the industry argue it employs fewer workers than Wendy’s restaurants.
However, this study finds that coal-dependent jobs in the U.S. are, in reality, eight times larger than the 53,000 jobs estimate and total approximately 420,000 — hardly any decline at all in the number of people working directly and in support roles for the industry.
This number represents a more accurate estimate of the jobs impact of the coal industry in the U.S. Further, these jobs are disproportionately concentrated in specific regions, such as Appalachia and in a number of states and communities, where they comprise some of the highest paying jobs available.
file:///C:/Users/prdoc/Downloads/Undercounting_Explained_How_Many_Coal_Jo.pdf

October 3, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

Uniontown (September 29, 2022) — Kentucky Coal Association President Tucker Davis and Alliance Coal hosted Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Williams for a tour today of River View Coal in Union County.
“As most know by now, River View Coal has announced the opening of a new mine in Henderson County,” Davis said. “Secretary Williams wanted to meet with company officials and some of the miners here in Union County. He’s a strong supporter of coal and wanted to express his thanks to the company for their investment, and to the miners for their hard work.”

October 1, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

MORGANTOWN, WV — West Virginia University’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research recently released a study looking at the economic impact of the nation’s coal industry. They looked at the nation as a whole and then broke down the impact by coal-producing state.

The study showed that in 2021, the coal mining industry in the state of Kentucky produced around 26.6 million short tons of coal and employed around 3.5 thousand workers. The reseachers estimate that this coal production generated around $1.4 billion in output in 2021. This output is estimated to generate $1.0 billion in secondary output impacts, resulting in a total economic impact of more than $2.4 billion in output in the Kentucky economy.

They further estimate that the 3.5 thousand coal mining jobs in Kentucky in 2021 are expected to generate nearly 5.0 thousand additional jobs in the state economy, resulting in a total employment impact of 8.5 thousand jobs. Further, coal production generates more than $670.0 million in labor income in the state.

Finally, coal production is estimated to generate $172.0 million in select state and local tax revenue.

October 1, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

LEXIINGTON — Friends of Coal is volunteer organization made up of Kentuckians and non-Kentuckians alike, with one main goal: informing and educating Kentucky citizens about the coal industry. Ask us how to become a Friend of Coal today! Contact us at kca@kentuckycoal.com.

October 1, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

UNIONTOWN, KY — State Senator Robbie Mills, (R-District 4) was presented an award today by Kentucky Coal Association President Tucker Davis for legislative work preventing investment companies from engaging in energy company boycotts. Mills was presented the award during a tour of Riverview Coal.

#friendsofcoal #coal #kentucky #Alliance #ESG

September 30, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

What’s dressed up as “progress” these days increasingly looks and sounds like a drift back to our Dark Age of misery, poverty and ignorance.

Anyone who still thinks wind turbines and solar panels equate with Earthly salvation, is more than just a little confused. But that’s the very point and purpose of those pushing the so-called inevitable ‘transition’ to an all wind and solar powered future.

As in days gone by, the model rests on inventing new forms of fear and firmly instilling them. And then following up with the promise of redemption through sacrifice and worship; albeit worshipping wind turbines and solar panels, instead of saints and idols.

The faithful readily subscribe to the myth and the mantras, merrily chanting them in the Twitterverse, trumpeting their peculiarly smug sense of superiority to the world at large.

Hot tip: if it looks like a cult and sounds like a cult, it’s a cult.

‘Green’ Energy Fantasy Unravels As Reality Grips Wind & Solar Obsessed Europe

September 30, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

Over the last year and a half, the renaissance of coal – both kinds – has been gobsmacking.

No one saw coal prices of $400 to $600 per tonne coming, including those in the coal industry.

“If, a year ago, fifteen months ago, you had said to people thermal coal could be $440, and coking coal could be $600, they’d call the ambulance and recommend a nice doctor,” Neil Bristow, managing director of H&W worldwide Consulting, said Thursday at a recent Coal Association of Canada conference.

“Who would believe it?”

“These high coal prices are occurring at a time when the Chinese economy is just dead flat on its back,” CEO of Xcoal Energy and Resources Ernie Thrasher added.

https://www.mining.com/coal-price-renaissance-how-long-can-it-last/

September 30, 2022 by Kentucky Coal Association Leave a Comment

Coal mining is returning to Henderson County in a big way and with a proven company.

Alliance Coal LLC on Thursday morning announced that it will develop a new $35 million underground mine in southern Henderson County that will be part of its existing River View Mine complex in Union County.

Once in operation, River View Henderson Portal 1 will create 260 new jobs plus employ a certain number of miners who will be transferred from the existing River View operation. Wages are to average $34.50 per hour. Including benefits, compensation will average $49 an hour.

https://www.thegleaner.com/story/news/local/2022/09/29/henderson-county-ky-alliance-coal-mine-260-future-jobs-kentucky/69522958007/

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