Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Government > Politics > OPEC's worst ni...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 331738 of 380020
Post > Topic >>

OPEC's worst nightmare...the world starts moving away from oil

by "Sid9" <sid9@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 22, 2008 at 12:11 AM

May 22, 2008

As Oil Prices Rise, Nations Revive Coal Mining

By MARTIN FACKLER

BIBAI, Japan - These rugged green mountains, once home to one of Asia's
most 
productive coal regions, are littered with abandoned mines and decaying 
towns - backwaters of an economy of bullet trains and hybrid cars.

But after decades of seemingly terminal decline, Japan's coal country is 
stirring again. With energy prices reaching record highs - oil settled
above 
$133 a barrel on Wednesday - Japan's high-cost mines are suddenly 
competitive again, and demand for their coal is booming. Production has 
jumped to its highest in nearly four decades, creating a sensation rarely 
felt in these mining communities: hope.

"We are seeing a flicker of light after long darkness," said Michio
Sakurai, 
the mayor of Bibai, on Japan's northernmost island of Hokkaido. "We never 
imagined coal would actually make a comeback."

Soaring commodity prices have had distorting effects across the global 
economy, driving up food prices and prompting fears of future energy 
shortages. But they have been an unanticipated boon to the coal producing 
regions of countries like Japan that had written off coal mining as a
relic 
of the Industrial Revolution.

In Bibai, once a thriving cultural center that had a ballet troupe and
five 
cinemas showing first-run Hollywood movies in its heyday in the 1950s, the

population shrank to 27,800, from 92,000. As mining jobs eva****ated, they 
left behind rows of abandoned clapboard-fronted stores that give some 
neighborhoods the air of a ghost town.

While Japan's coal industry remains tiny, its revival is an example of how

higher commodity prices are driving a search for resources even in some of

the world's most urbanized and developed nations.

In recent months, South Korea has experienced calls to create a domestic 
coal industry in order to reduce dependence on im****ts. In the United 
Kingdom, where coal's decline became a symbol of withered industrial
might, 
companies are increasing production and considering reopening at least one

closed mine as demand for British coal rises.

"It's now the perfect storm with demand for our coal from South Africa to 
China and Australia," said Rhidian Davies, president of Energybuild, an 
operator of mines in South Wales that will increase production at one of
its 
mines tenfold over the next five years.

In Japan, higher commodity prices have also unleashed soaring demand for
the 
heavily populated nation's other limited natural resources, including
lumber 
and natural gas, where production has risen nearly 20 percent this year to
a 
three-decade high.

But coal is the most potentially plentiful fossil fuel in Japan, and 
companies have been quick to embrace now affordable domestic supplies out
of 
deep-rooted anxieties about Japan's heavy reliance on im****ted energy.

While there are no national figures yet, mining communities re****t sharply

higher production in the last two years. For example, in Bibai the city's 
last two mines, both small strip mines, produced just 34,961 tons of coal
in 
2005. This year, they expect to surpass 150,000 tons, the highest
production 
since 1973, when the city's last large underground mine was shutting down.

For decades, Japanese coal, at $100 or more a ton, was simply too
expensive 
because of high wages and extraction costs. But with global prices now 
reaching the same heights, Japanese coal is looking more attractive.

The price of power-station coal ****pped from Newcastle, Australia, settled

at $134 a metric ton for the week ending May 16, from a high of $142 for
the 
week ending Feb. 15. In May 2003, the price was $23.25 a metric ton.

The utility company Hokkaido Electric Power announced it would nearly
double 
purchases of domestic coal this year to 110,000 tons, while Mitsubi**** 
Materials, a cement maker, said it would buy domestic coal for the first 
time in 18 years.

Demand is so high that one of Bibai's mine operators, the Hokuryo 
Cor****ation, is now scouting a second mine to double its output.

But the industry's long decline has made it difficult to gear up. There
are 
almost no geologists left in Japan specializing in coal, or recent surveys

of coal deposits in the region. To conduct its search, Hokuryo is relying
on 
a stack of torn, yellowed maps hand-drawn by company geologists more than
40 
years ago.

"Our predecessors braved the bears in the woods to leave us these maps," 
said Fumihiro Yamamoto, the Hokuryo mine's director.

Other changes in the last four decades could also hamper efforts to
increase 
production. Hokuryo and other companies say they can no longer build large

underground mines because no Japanese worker would want to work in such
dark 
and dangerous conditions today.

At the same time, environmental regulations prevent most strip-mining,
which 
creates huge open pits that can be eyesores. There have been proposals to 
raise production using new, untested technologies like pumping in water or

heat to liquefy coal so it can be sucked it out of the ground like oil.

Even if such technologies worked, no one is expecting Japan to become 
self-sufficient in coal anytime soon. Domestic coal production contributes

only 0.8 percent of the total coal consumed by Japan. Still, there is 
enormous potential: Sorachi, the region that includes Bibai, sits on an 
estimated six billion tons of coal, enough to supply Japan's current level

of use for 30 years.

"I don't think we can expect a dramatic increase in the near future" in 
domestic coal production, said Hirofumi Furukawa, general manager of the 
Japan Coal Energy Center, an industry-affiliated research group. "But
still, 
it is good to have a rare bit of encouraging news."

Japan's coal industry needs cheering up: nationwide, production is down
from 
its peak in 1961 when 662 mines yielded 55 million tons of coal. Last
year, 
eight mines produced about 1.4 million tons, according to Mr. Furukawa and

Japan's economy ministry.

Japan's hard-hit coal mining communities have sought ways to cope with the

industry's long decay. The town of Yubari, an hour east of Bibai, went 
bankrupt after building an extravagant amusement park, the Coal History 
Village, which failed to attract tourists.

That does not mean coal is a savior. In fact, so far the coal revival has 
failed to produce new jobs in Bibai's mines, where machines now do most of

the digging. Many residents doubt a real renaissance is even possible.
Much 
of the city's population is in its 70s or older. Some doubt that
working-age 
people who left when the mines closed will ever want to come back.

"Even if a few young people come back, it won't be enough to save this 
 town," said Mitsuko Michiyama, 69, who owns a clothing shop on an empty 
shopping street where most storefronts are boarded up.

Still, business is looking up for Hokuryo, a unit of the Mitsubi**** 
Cor****ation that once operated vast mines producing a million tons of coal
a 
year and employing 8,000 workers.

Today, it employs just 40 at its single remaining strip mine.

The mine had survived by supplying about 30,000 tons a year to Hokkaido 
Electric, which bought the coal in order to sup****t a local industry.
Then, 
starting last year, the mine began receiving calls from other potential 
buyers. This year, it has promised to deliver some 120,000 tons of coal,
far 
beyond the mine's initial projected output of 50,000 tons, said Mr. 
Yamamoto, the mine's director.

With its half dozen bulldozers and power shovels digging full-time, the 
company has had to turn down a half dozen would-be buyers.

"It's frustrating," said Mr. Yamamoto, who has witnessed the industry's 
decline after he started working 36 years ago in one of Japan's last big 
underground mines. "It was so hard for so long, and now we refuse big 
customers."

At the mine, an open pit cut into a mountainside above Bibai, the mood is 
noticeably upbeat. Workers say they are working every day of the week,
which 
was not the case even last year.

"We're all really thankful," said Take**** Sasaki, who wore a hard hat as
he 
checked one of the conveyers that wash and sort newly unearthed coal. "If 
this keeps going, it will mean a whole new era for Bibai."
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
OPEC's worst nightmare...the world starts moving away from oil
"Sid9" <sid9  2008-05-22 00:11:46 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Fri Dec 5 8:04:16 CST 2008.