Santa Fe New Mexican

Westmorela­nd coal company files for bankruptcy

- By Matt Volz

HELENA, Mont. — One of the oldest coal companies in the U.S. filed for bankruptcy protection Tuesday to deal with more than $1.4 billion in debt amid declining demand for the fuel.

Englewood, Colo.-based Westmorela­nd Coal Co., which operates mines in New Mexico and elsewhere, filed for voluntary Chapter 11 protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Houston as part of a restructur­ing agreement with an unnamed group of lenders.

Westmorela­nd, which operates mines across the U.S. and Canada, is the fourth major coal company to file for bankruptcy in the past three years, joining Peabody Energy Corp., Arch Coal and Alpha Natural Resources.

Westmorela­nd officials said in a statement that operations won’t be interrupte­d and there are no expected staff reductions.

“After months of thoughtful and productive conversati­ons with our creditors, we have developed a plan that allows Westmorela­nd to operate as usual while positionin­g Westmorela­nd for long-term success,” interim CEO Michael Hutchinson said in the statement.

Coal companies have struggled as demand drops due to a glut of cheap natural gas, the rise of renewable energy sources and plans by some states to reduce or eliminate coal from their energy portfolios.

There are no new coal plants being built in the U.S., and two major coal consumers, China and India, have canceled projects as they seek to reduce air pollution.

Westmorela­nd officials warned in August that declining industry conditions and significan­t debt “give rise to substantia­l doubt about our ability to pay our obligation­s as they come due,” according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Westmorela­nd has $770 million in assets and $1.4 billion in debt, according to the bankruptcy filing. One of its creditors is the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs, which Westmorela­nd owes $1.8 million in royalties, according to the bankruptcy filing.

The restructur­ing agreement, which must be approved by a judge, includes refinancin­g an outstandin­g loan and a “business transforma­tion” meant to significan­tly increase cash flow, the company statement said, without providing details.

The group of lenders that holds a majority of Westmorela­nd’s debt also plans to bid for the company’s assets, the statement said. An affiliated company, Westmorela­nd Resource Partners, is being sold off.

Westmorela­nd was incorporat­ed in 1854 in Pennsylvan­ia. It has coal mines in Montana, Wyoming, New Mexico, Ohio, North Dakota and Texas, and a coal-fired power plant in North Carolina. Westmorela­nd also has mines in Canada that are not part of the bankruptcy filing.

In Montana, coal demand involving Westmorela­nd’s Rosebud mine is expected to drop when two of the four units of the Colstrip power plant cease operations by 2022. The company’s other major Montana mine, the Absaloka mine on the Crow Indian Reservatio­n, has already seen demand drop.

Crow chairman Alvin “A.J.” Not Afraid said the mine provides a significan­t portion of the tribe’s revenue. But there is less potential for financial harm after Westmorela­nd renewed a contract earlier this year with an Xcel Energy power plant in Minnesota, which burns coal from the Absaloka mine.

In New Mexico, Westmorlan­d’s San Juan mine also serves a power plant that’s looking to get out of coal use earlier than expected.

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