Advertisement

Wyoming officials back various schemes in bid to rescue coal

 
Conveyor belts and heavy equipment remove coal from the Wyodak Resources mine in northeastern Wyoming for delivery. As the popularity of coal declines, the state looks to rescue it. “Listen, coal’s valuable. It’s plentiful,” Gov. Matt Mead says.
Conveyor belts and heavy equipment remove coal from the Wyodak Resources mine in northeastern Wyoming for delivery. As the popularity of coal declines, the state looks to rescue it. “Listen, coal’s valuable. It’s plentiful,” Gov. Matt Mead says.
Published Jan. 19, 2016

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Public enemy No. 1 for climate change and no longer the fossil fuel utilities prefer to burn to generate electricity, coal has few allies these days. But one state is still fighting to save the industry: Wyoming.

From a proposal to burn the stuff underground to hosting a contest to find profitable uses for carbon dioxide from power plants, the top coal-producing state has spent tens of millions of dollars for a coal savior — with little to show.

Big-time state spending was easy in Wyoming not long ago. Good times for coal, oil and natural gas created huge budget surpluses.

Now that all three industries are suffering from low prices, looming deficits in the Cowboy State are raising an old question: Is it time to diversify the economy beyond fossil fuels?

"They've chosen to support the coal industry whether it makes any sense or not. I mean, we're basically a coal colony," said Bob LeResche, chairman of the Powder River Basin Resource Council landowners group.

Some of the coal industry's top players, including Arch Coal and Alpha Natural Resources, have filed for bankruptcy as utilities switch to cheaper and cleaner-burning natural gas and the cost of renewable energy keeps falling. The Obama administration Friday suspended the leasing program for coal on federal lands, most of which occur in Wyoming and neighboring Montana.

Will a Superman for coal come to the rescue in time?

"The odds look pretty slim right now," said Rob Godby, a University of Wyoming professor.

The stakes for Wyoming are high. Coal mining and directly related business account for 14 percent of the economy and 1 in 5 jobs in the state, according to the university's Center for Energy Economics.

Here's a look at what Wyoming has done — often at public expense — to try to save coal:

Underground coal gasification

Wyoming regulators recently agreed to let an Australian company pollute groundwater to experiment with a use for coal that doesn't involve burning it in a power plant.

Underground coal gasification involves partially burning coal still in the ground. The process yields a mix of gases called syngas, which can be burned more cleanly than coal directly.

Carbon sequestration

Six years ago, the University of Wyoming's Carbon Management Institute began investigating whether a 25-square-mile area in southwest Wyoming could trap carbon dioxide emitted from power plants.

The institute spent $17 million of taxpayer money drilling a 12,000-foot-deep well in 2011. But it stopped because researchers realized it would cost as much as $750 million to acquire enough carbon dioxide to complete the experiment.

Coal to liquid fuel

Turning coal into diesel, gasoline and other liquid fuels isn't a new idea. Germany did it during World War II, and a company proposed it in Wyoming as oil prices began to creep toward record highs in 2007.

The $2 billion DKRW Advanced Fuels plant outside the tiny town of Medicine Bow in southern Wyoming never got off the drawing board — except for a couple concrete pads and $1.9 million in state funding to rebuild 13 miles of road for the project.

Low global oil prices now threaten to shut down the project once and for all. DKRW officials recently warned local officials it isn't feasible at current prices.

Finding new markets

Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead and other Wyoming officials also have been to Japan, India, South Korea, Taiwan, Australia and China in recent years to promote Wyoming coal — with no new markets to show for their efforts.

One problem is that the West Coast lacks port facilities to export much of Wyoming's coal. Regulators are reviewing big coal terminal proposals in Oregon and Washington — projects supported by some locals but opposed by others, including American Indian tribes and environmentalists.

Last year, the Wyoming Legislature authorized issuing up to $1 billion in state bonds, if necessary, to finance construction of those terminals. The state hasn't gone that route yet, but Mead said he expects the port facilities to win regulatory approval.

"Listen, coal's valuable. It's plentiful," Mead said. "It is being used and will continue to be used around the planet, regardless of what we do in this country."