Dilemma for coal
industry
Dec 4, 2006 - Cincinnati Post
COLUMBUS -- Coal mines in Ohio are boosting production to meet new
demands for energy at a time when the state lacks the power to force the
cleanup of decades-old environmental damage estimated at $300 million, a
newspaper reported.
The damage left behind from mines abandoned before 1978 includes
36,000 acres of land littered with millions of tons of strip-mined rock
and waste coal, the Columbus Dispatch reported in a story published
Sunday. Underground mines also leaked poisonous metals and acids into
more than 1,000 miles of streams.
A federal law passed in 1978 required states to help coal companies
clean up sites when they close, but a backlog remains, the newspaper
said. It includes an additional 913 acres on 25 mine sites that must be
reclaimed at a cost of $3.8 million.
"The number of acres to be reclaimed increases to a point where we
can't keep up with it," said John Husted, a state Mineral Resources
Division program manager who oversees bankrupt mine-site restorations.
The dilemma comes as the coal industry is enjoying a rebound, fueled
by America's appetite for more electricity. Mines are being reopened and
new miners are being hired.
Ohio coal mines produced 25.2 million tons last year, up from 21
million tons in 2002.
Power companies are spending billions to fit old plants with
pollution-control devices, and they promise to create cleaner- burning
plants. But state programs designed to safeguard the land are so riddled
with problems that federal officials may take over, the Dispatch
reported.
Ohio has a small corps of mine inspectors -- one for every 26 coal
sites in eastern and southeastern Ohio. That tied West Virginia for the
worst ratio of any Appalachian state, according to the U.S. Office of
Surface Mining.
Federal officials traveled with Ohio inspectors between 2004 and
2005.
George Rieger, a U.S. Office of Surface Mining division chief, said
Ohio inspectors found more violations at mines when accompanied by
federal officials.
"That's an indication to us that they need to be doing a better job,"
Rieger said.
The other problem is money. State law requires coal companies to post
bonds equal to $2,500 for every acre of mined land. Ohio can tap the
funds if a company collapses, but that -- along with a 9- cent tax that
coal companies pay on each ton of mined coal -- doesn't come close to
meeting expenses for restoring the land, the Dispatch reported.
Ohio's tax produced a total of $2.3 million for the state last year.
The state recently backed off a threat to sue Marietta Coal when the
company fell behind in its restoration work. The company had $3.9
million in bonds, but cleanup was estimated to cost $8.9 million.
"When your bond is insufficient, there's very little leverage for
them to keep up," said Tom Tugend, a deputy chief at Mineral Resources
Management.
Marietta Coal President John Nicolozakes said his company has reached
an agreement with the state to do the work.
"As far as Marietta Coal is concerned, I think we've done very well
at rectifying the problem," he said.
Federal officials have ordered Ohio to raise more money for its
mining program or risk losing the power to issue permits and inspect
mines, the Dispatch said. A bill in the Ohio House calls for raising
more funds.
If it doesn't pass, "then the federal government will have long taken
over the regulation of coal mining in Ohio," said Sam Speck, director of
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
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