The Denver Post

Wyoming coal mine granted green light

- By Mead Gruver

A state environmen­tal review board voted Wednesday to allow Wyoming’s first major coal mine in decades to proceed despite the objections of another coal company.

Amid competitio­n from natural gas and tougher environmen­tal regulation­s, coal mines tend to be cutting back production or even shutting down — not opening anew. Kentuckyba­sed Ramaco’s relatively small Brook Mine would buck that trend but has faced opposition from another company and a ranch.

The Wyoming Environmen­tal Quality Council voted unanimousl­y to allow Ramaco to go ahead despite the Big Horn Coal Company’s objections.

Ramaco hopes to begin digging a few miles north of Sheridan by early next year, CEO Randall Atkins said.

“We’re very pleased that the EQC agreed with our conclusion there were not any substantia­l damages to the surface owners,” Atkins said. “We look forward to moving expeditiou­sly with the balance of the permitting process and to beginning our project.”

Ramaco and the Padlock Ranch resolved their difference­s Tuesday on confidenti­al terms, he said.

Earlier this month, Ramaco announced plans for two new mines in Virginia and West Virginia that would produce metallurgi­cal coal for the steel industry. Essentiall­y all coal mined in Wyoming is not metallurgi­cal but thermal coal, the type burned in power plants to generate electricit­y.

In Wyoming and other Western states, mineral rights can be owned separately from the surface of the ground. That sometimes leads to conflicts between the oil and gas industry and landowners who don’t want petroleum developmen­t on their property.

Such conflicts are rare for Wyoming’s well-establishe­d coal industry, however, which produces about 40 percent of the nation’s coal.

Within the boundaries of the Brook Mine area, Padlock Ranch owns 1,400 acres and Big Horn Mining Company 1,100 acres of surface land. The mine would keep cattle away from the Tongue River and likely destroy a livestock watering system, attorneys for the ranch told the commission in a March 16 letter.

The mine would restrict access and use of facilities, including a bridge and rail spur, should Big Horn Mining Company also decide to mine coal in the area, an attorney for the company wrote the commission April 20.

Ultimately council members weren’t convinced the mine would substantia­lly prohibit Big Horn Coal’s operations, as would have been required to deny the order in lieu of consent.

A lawsuit Ramaco filed against Big Horn Coal in state court remains pending.

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