Surface Mining
Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Feature Stories

University of Kentucky Researchers Create Longwall Shearers to Combat Coal Dust in Mines

August 17, 2016

According to Thomas Novak, professor and Alliance Coal Chair in the Department of Mining Engineering at the University of Kentucky, approximately 50 percent of all coal produced in underground mines in the U.S. comes from a particular kind of underground

Read more...

Greg Kozera: Only if We Change Our Thinking is Coal a Future Fuel

August 17, 2016

Henry Ford said, “If you think you can or think you can’t, you are right.” We just had our Charleston Catholic High School annual alumni soccer game. All of the returning players this year had played on state championship teams

Read more...

The ‘War On Coal’ Threatens Mining Town Craig Colorado

August 17, 2016

Coal, from extraction to use as a generation source, forms the literal bedrock of Craig. The past few years have shaken the once quiet town, as an onslaught of federal government regulations and actions by environmental activists bent on keeping

Read more...

Steve Milloy: EPA Corrupting an ‘Independent’ Science Panel

August 10, 2016

The Environmental Protection Agency has illegally stacked a key science advisory board with highly paid cronies — but nothing can be done about it. I have a comatose lawsuit to prove it. We sued the EPA in May because a

Read more...

Does Coal Still Have a Future?

August 5, 2016

Five or six years ago, Greene County coal mines were looking for workers. “We had a real shortage of people going into mining,” said Barbara Cole, manager of the state’s CareerLink office in Waynesburg. “A lot of miners were retiring

Read more...

Apache Powder Put the Boom in Arizona Mining

July 6, 2016

One of the great technical breakthroughs in late 19th century mining occurred with the introduction of nitroglycerin, a colorless, earth-shattering liquid used initially in quarrying. Nitro, a high explosive five times as powerful as black powder, was known for its

Read more...

New Study Finds EPA Overstated Benefits and Ignored Costs of Clean Power Plan

June 22, 2016

The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Clean Power Plan overstates its benefits and underestimates its costs, according to a new study published Thursday by the conservative Manhattan Institute. “My conclusion is that there are few benefits, which have been massively overestimated,

Read more...

Wyoming Governor Mead Puts Focus on Scientific Innovation Within the Coal Industry

June 17, 2016

The Western Governors’ Association meeting in Jackson Hole this weekend focused on two major themes: conservation and growth. While those ideas are often at odds with each other, the governors in attendance shed light on emerging technologies, which their administrations

Read more...

Mining Officials Assess Progress on New Underground Survival Equipment

June 10, 2016

Kevin Stricklin and Joe Main can rattle off a list of mine disasters that share a common ending: Miners trapped underground lived through an initial fire or explosion, but they could not get out or weren’t able to survive long

Read more...

Housing Vacancies in Gillette, Wyoming Rise with Loss of Energy Jobs

June 3, 2016

In a typical Gillette neighborhood on a residential street lined with signs advertising homes for sale or rent, Jake Smith is busy moving his family out of their rental home. “We moved here in November,” Smith said. “I moved here

Read more...

Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement




Advertisement