Powder River Basin (PRB) coal is classified as "
sub-bituminous" and contains an average of approximately 8,500 btu/lb, with low
sulfur. Contrast this with eastern,
Appalachian
bituminous coal containing an average of 12,500 btu/lb and high sulfur. PRB coal was essentially worthless until air pollution emissions from power plants (primarily sulfur dioxide, or "SO2") became a concern. A coal-fired plant designed to burn Appalachian coal must be modified to remove SO2 at a cost estimated in 1999 to be around $322 per ton of SO2. If it switched to burning PRB coal, the cost dropped to $113 per ton of SO2 removed. Removal is accomplished by installing scrubbers. The Powder River Basin is the largest
coal mining region in the US, but most of the coal is buried too deeply to be economically accessible. The Powder River Basin coal beds are shaped like elongated bowls and as mines expand from east to west in the Powder River Basin, they will be going "down the sides of the bowl". This means that the
overburden (rock lying over the coal) will increase as will the
stripping ratio (the ratio of rock that needs to be moved). The
United States Geological Survey has conducted a series of studies on the economic accessibility of coal in the major coal-producing regions of the country. The studies typically found that only a small fraction of the coal would be economically accessible at the price then of $10.47/ton. In August 2008, the USGS issued an updated assessment of coal in the Powder River Basin. After considering stripping ratios and production costs, the USGS concluded that at that time, only 6% of the original resource, or 10.1 billion short tons of coal, was economically recoverable. At a price of $60/ton, however, roughly half (48%) of the coal would become economic to produce. Increasing the price paid for coal can increase the amount of economically recoverable coal, but increasing the price of coal also increases its production cost. Because coal is a solid, it cannot be produced from many scattered wells like oil and gas can be. Rather, coal has to be produced from mines that expand slowly by moving massive quantities of overburden.
Coal mining Fifteen mines operate in the Powder River Basin, with most of the active mining taking place in drainages of the
Cheyenne River. The US uses about 600 million tons of coal a year, with about 40% of the coal coming from the Powder River Basin. The amount of coal coming from the Powder River Basin has been increasing over the last 20 years. In 2019, 43% of the nation's coal was mined in the Power River basin. The mines in the Powder River Basin typically have less than 20 years of life remaining. Almost all of the coal in the Powder River Basin is federally-owned, and further mine expansions will require a series of federal and state approvals, as well as large investments in additional mine equipment to begin the excavations. The majority of the coal mined in the Powder River Basin is part of the
Fort Union Formation (
Paleocene), with the low sulfur and
ash content of the coal in the region making it very desirable. Coal supplies about one-fifth of the
United States'
electricity supplies. The Powder River Basin mines supply approximately 40% of the coal that fuels those stations (mainly east of the Rocky Mountains) for generating
electricity. The mines work in areas where the stripping ratio is between 1:1 (i.e. one ton of rock for one ton of coal) and 3:1. As the mines expand the stripping ratio will increase. As more rock must be moved (using large electrically powered draglines and diesel and electric mining trucks) the production cost will also increase. The mines are largely non-union operations with a history of squelching labor activity. According to historian Ryan Driskell Tate, surface mining in remote areas happened to reduce some of the "occupational togetherness" typically associated with coal miners working shoulder-to-shoulder
underground in
Appalachia.
Coal mining companies operating in the Powder River Basin Southern Powder River Basin •
Arch Coal (
Black Thunder Mine,
Coal Creek Mine) •
Black Hills Corporation/
Wyodak Resources Development (
Wyodak Mine) •
Contura Energy (
Belle Ayr Mine,
Eagle Butte Mine) • Navajo Transitional Energy Company (Antelope Mine,
Cordero Rojo Mine) •
Kiewit Corporation (
Buckskin Mine) •
Peabody Energy (
North Antelope Rochelle Mine,
Caballo Mine,
Rawhide Mine) •
Western Fuels Association (
Dry Fork Mine) Northern Powder River Basin •
Lighthouse Resources (
Decker Mine) • Navajo Transitional Energy Company (Spring Creek) •
Westmoreland Coal Company (
Absaloka Mine,
Rosebud Mine) In June 2019,
Peabody Energy and
Arch Coal announced a joint venture for their combined Powder River Basin assets. In September 2020,
Peabody Energy and
Arch Coal abandoned their plans for a joint venture following regulatory intervention by the
Federal Trade Commission.
Power plants fueled from Powder River Basin coal (incomplete list) •
James H. Miller Generating Station (Jefferson, Alabama) •
Flint Creek Power Plant –
American Electric Power (Arkansas) •
Independence Power Plant -
Entergy (
Newark, Arkansas) •
White Bluff Power Plant -
Entergy (
Redfield, Arkansas) • Plum Point Energy Station,
NRG Energy (Osceola, Arkansas) •
Pawnee Station –
Xcel Energy (Colorado) •
Comanche Station –
Xcel Energy (Colorado) •
Rawhide Energy Station, Wellington, (Colorado) •
Robert W Scherer Power Plant –
Georgia Power (Georgia) •
Newton Power Plant –
Ameren,
Newton, Illinois •
Joppa Generating Station,
Vistra Energy - (Joppa, Illinois) •
Warrick Power Plant (Newburgh, Indiana) •
Jeffrey Energy Center (Kansas) •
Big Cajun II – (New Roads, Louisiana) •
Eckert Power Plant – (
Lansing, Michigan) •
Erickson Power Plant – (
Lansing, Michigan) •
Monroe Power Plant –
Detroit Edison (
Monroe, Michigan) •
St. Clair Power Plant –
Detroit Edison – (
East China, Michigan) •
Allen S. King Plant –
Xcel Energy (Minnesota) •
Sherburne County (Sherco) Plant –
Xcel Energy (Minnesota) •
Sikeston Power Plant (Sikeston, Missouri) •
Gerald Gentleman Station –
Nebraska Public Power District (Nebraska) •
Omaha Public Power District – (Omaha, NE) (Nebraska City, Nebraska) •
GREC –
Vinita, OK – (
Chouteau, Oklahoma) •
J. Robert Welsh Power Plant –
American Electric Power (Texas) •
Fayette Power Project – (
La Grange, Texas) •
Harrington Station –
Xcel Energy (Texas) •
Tolk Station – Xcel Energy (Texas) •
W. A. Parish Station –
NRG Energy (Texas) •
Limestone Station –
NRG Energy (Texas) •
Centralia Power Plant (Centralia, Washington) •
Edgewater Generating Station,
Sheboygan, Wisconsin •
Dry Fork Station - Gillette, Wyoming •
Laramie River Station – (Wheatland, Wyoming) •
Brandon Generating Station –
Manitoba Hydro (Brandon, Manitoba) ==Petroleum==