Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

IOU FOR COAL CLEANUP

- By Mead Gruver Press

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — As more coal companiesf­ile for bankruptcy, it’s increasing­ly likely that taxpayers will be stuck with the high costs of preventing abandoned mines from becoming environmen­tal disasters.

The question is not if, but when, where and how many more coal mines will close as the industry declines, analysts say. Many mines already operate at a loss, and there’s not enough money in the fuel anymore to enable their owners to keep their promises to clean up the land.

“It’s sort of a situation where nobody, really, is going to end up looking good,” said James Stevenson, director of North American coal for analyst firm IHS. “The states have ... a significan­t risk — the federal government does aswell.”

This reclamatio­n crisis looms because of a practice called self-bonding, which allows coal companies to promise to eventually cover the cost of cleaning up abandoned mines without first setting aside the necessary money.

Because of self-bonding, billions of dollars in legally required reclamatio­n funding exist only as IOUs, without dedicated assets or bonds backed by thirdparty investors.

Nationwide, self-bonding in the coal mining industry tops $3.3 billion. That includes $2.3 billion in IOUs that the top bankrupt coal companies— AlphaNatur­al Resources, Arch Coal and Peabody — owe in five states, according to an Associated Press analysis of bonding obligation­s in the top 16 coal mining states.

The dilemma for state and federal regulators got even bleaker when the nation’s largest coal producer, Peabody, filed for Chapter 11 protection from its creditors in April. Peabody alone holds more than $1.1 billion in self-bonding obligation­s for mines in Illinois, Indiana, NewMexico andWyoming, where its North Antelope Rochelle mine produces almost 12 percent of the nation’s coal.

With several major U.S. coal producers filing for Chapter 11 over the last two years, the issue will play an important part in shaping coal’s future. Mines in Appalachia are particular­ly likely to close as the industry consolidat­es around a smaller number of stillprofi­table mines out West, Stevenson said.

In Richmond, Va., Judge Kevin Huennekens is considerin­g Alpha’s proposal to transfer its “crown jewel” mines inWyoming to creditors and close its unprofitab­le mines inWest Virginia. Alpha’s self-bonding obligation­s total $410 million in Wyoming and $243 million inWest Virginia.

The company’s plan would leave a reorganize­d Alpha without a reliable profit stream to address reclamatio­n inWest Virginia, the state’s attorneys told the judge in April.

An Alpha spokesman didn’t return a request for comment, while spokespeop­le for Arch and Peabody emphasized their companies’ commitment to reclamatio­n that occurs as part of day-to-day coalmining operations.

Peabody is in talks with states about freeing up as much as $200 million to cover the company’s selfbondin­g obligation­s during reorganiza­tion, spokeswoma­n Beth Sutton said.

Many utilities will need coal to generate power for decades to come, but low prices for natural gas and increasing­ly cheaper renewable energy have driven down coal’s share of the nation’s electricit­y portfolio from half to about a third in the past decade.

Coal’s prospects are grim that major lenders so no longer plan to finance new coal mines or coal-fired power plants.

“Lender fatigue is probably at an all-time high,” said Monica Bonar, senior director at Fitch Ratings.

The 1977 Surface Mining and Reclamatio­n Act enabled companies to open strip mines on the condition that assets be set aside to contain any pollution and return the mines to something resembling the preexistin­g landscape. But companies with debts no greater than 2.5 times their net worth were allowed to avoid tying up capital by “self-bonding” instead.

Self-bonding has grown to represent over a third of the industry’s cleanup costs. With several firms in bankruptcy, states have reached agreements to secure pennies on the dollar for reclamatio­n should Chapter 11 reorganiza­tion proceed to Chapter 7 liquidatio­n.

Wyoming has agreed to keep in place permits for coal mines that otherwise would have insufficie­nt bonding to operate.

“One of the fundamenta­l parts of our surface mining laws is a mine can’t get permitted without adequate bonding,” said Shannon Anderson, an attorney with the Powder River Basin Resource Council in Sheridan. “Wyoming agreed to basically not pay attention to that legal requiremen­t.”

The federal Office of Surface Mining Reclamatio­n and Enforcemen­t has asked states to explain their approval of self-bonding in several cases.

“It’s a big issue,” Interior Secretary Sally Jewell told the House Natural Resources Committee late last year. “There is no question that with the increased financial fragility of many coal mining companies, if they are self-bonded, that does potentiall­y leave the states and the taxpayers at risk.”

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