October 16, 2009
EPA moves to block largest strip mine in W.Va. history
Gazette file photo
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers processes about 80,000 Clean Water Act permits every year, but the EPA has used its veto power only 12 times since 1972 -- and has never used it to block a coal-mining permit.
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Late last month, corps District Commander Robert D. Peterson refused the EPA's request that the corps revoke the Spruce Mine permit or at least suspend it and push the company to reduce the number and size of valley fills proposed.

Peterson said corps staff members "determined there were no practicable alternatives that would have less impacts on the aquatic environment" and that "all appropriate steps were taken to minimize potential adverse impacts."

In court documents, Mingo Logan lawyer Bob McLusky has criticized the EPA's effort to revisit the permit.

"Its belated objections undermine any confidence that mine operators and hard-working West Virginians can have that the permits on which they depend will not be forever subject to the shifting whims of federal regulators who rarely venture into Appalachia," McLusky wrote.

However, public records show that the EPA has consistently raised the same concerns about the Spruce Mine, even during the Bush administration.

During the comment period on the current Spruce Mine permit, in June 2006, the EPA issued a letter that ranked the proposal as "EC-2," or "Environmental Concerns and Insufficient Information."

The EPA praised the company and the corps for reducing the mine's impacts, but said the permit still did not contain adequate mitigation for water-quality damage, sufficient study of cumulative impacts or a detailed review of potential environmental justice effects of the operation.

"We have remaining environmental concerns based on the uncertainty of the mitigation proposals and as yet incomplete cumulative impact assessment and management plans for the Little Coal River watershed," wrote then-EPA regional administrator Donald Welsh.

Environmental groups have been fighting the Spruce Mine since 1998, when it was proposed as a 3,113-acre mine that would bury more than 10 miles of streams in the Pigeonroost Hollow area near Blair. Arch Coal had proposed it as a continuation of its Dal-Tex mountaintop removal operation.

U.S. District Judge Charles H. Haden II blocked the permit, prompting Arch Coal to close Dal-Tex and lay off more than 300 United Mine Workers union members employed there. Since then, Arch has continued to seek the permit but shifted it to its non-union arm.

In January 2007, corps officials issued a slightly scaled-back version of the Spruce Mine that would bury more than 7 miles of streams. Soon after that, environmental groups sought to have U.S. District Judge Robert C. Chambers block the permit.

The Spruce Mine was not among those halted by a March 2007 ruling by Chambers or directly affected by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision overturning Chambers, but, the company accepted a "stand-still" agreement that severely limited mining and filling operations, at least until the appeal was decided.

Last year, the mine employed about 30 workers and produced about 600,000 tons of coal, federal records show.

Reach Ken Ward Jr. at kw...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-1702.

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Posted By: 4GOD (5:18am 10-26-2009)
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Just pointing out that surface mining is much less expensive and labor intensive than deep. Therefore the value added to the state is less. Yet the environmental impact is greater.

The permit was blocked because the Corp had not reviewed all impact material:
http://wvgazette.com/News/MiningtheMountains/200807070391?page=2&build=cache

The permit was later granted, but the EPA intervened:
http://www.epa.gov/region03/mtntop/pdf/Mining_COE_Spruce1_Ltr_16Oct09.pdf

It used the following justification; in which even employees of the WV DEP were involved:
http://www.epa.gov/Region3/mtntop/pdf/downstreameffects.pdf

Yet our officials, without the input of supporting state experts, take it upon themselves to challenge the intervention.

Make sense to you?

Posted By: Rational (1:10pm 10-25-2009)
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[i]I assumed we were still talking about WV coal production costs. I have no idea what you good folks are talking about or the points you are attempting to prove or disprove.
[/i]

That's what I meant when I conceded to 4GOD.

Posted By: MU4WVU2 (7:03am 10-25-2009)
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I concede that I entered into a discussion about which I should have refrained. After taking some time to attempt to trace the origin of the current discussion, I admit to have entered into a debate about which I am unable to comprehend the purpose. I assumed we were still talking about WV coal production costs. I have no idea what you good folks are talking about or the points you are attempting to prove or disprove.

Posted By: 4GOD (5:27am 10-25-2009)
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MU, look at the numbers. NAICS/SIC codes are 212111 for surface mining and 212112 for underground. I also included 213113 for support services. Surface mining produces 67% of the coal volume in the US, so just double the number for underground to compare like volumes. The dollar comparisons have to be based on United States totals. How do you break down to a specific state? Multistate (well less multinational) numbers corporations often cross charge to minimize taxes. The holding company state gets the taxes (and usually executive pay) benefits. Not WV.
http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-ds_name=EC0721I1&-_lang=en

For WV, surface mining is only 41% of the total WV production and MTR is 25%. This was just to place representative volumes.

The $62 billion dollars is just the 1 billion tons used in US electrical generation. These are the nonclimate related damage at the utilization point. This does not include extraction or delivery indirect costs.

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