Environment

Coal ports for Washington: The fight starts in Montana

Proposals to send coal to China from Longview or Bellingham depend on a supply dug from rich deposits in Wyoming and Montana. Montana's Democratic governor has become a big booster, but others there are very concerned.

Coal ports for Washington: The fight starts in Montana
Sponsorship

by

Ashli Blow

Proposals to send coal to China from Longview or Bellingham depend on a supply dug from rich deposits in Wyoming and Montana. Montana's Democratic governor has become a big booster, but others there are very concerned.

Part 1 of a two-part series on the Montana aspects of plans for shipping  coal to China through Washington state ports. Reprinted and adapted  from the Missoula Independent with permission.

The Otter Creek Valley, in southeastern Montana,  glows green in early July, dotted with sage and bright patches of yellow  clover and wild mustard after a spring of heavy rains. Ranchland rises  gently toward rugged hills and buttes. Otter Creek twists a narrow  channel through the middle, reflecting clouds. Otter Creek Road follows  the creek. Few pickups pass between the unincorporated community of  Otter to the south and the one-gas-station town of Ashland to the north.

A month before and about 6,000 miles away, in Beijing, a city of 20  million, where enveloping smog obscures the surrounding mountains,  Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer spoke of this Montana valley — or, rather,  what’s beneath it. The governor of the state with the greatest coal  reserves keynoted a coal conference sponsored by Peabody Energy, the  largest private coal company in the world, with massive operations in  northeast Wyoming, just south of Otter. Schweitzer and coal companies  such as Peabody see economic opportunity in exporting coal to China and  other energy-hungry Asian markets. More than a billion tons of coal  beneath the Otter Creek Valley could be shipped and burned there.

The Democratic governor addressed a crowd of researchers and coal company reps at  the coal gasification conference at the Great Wall Sheraton Hotel. “I  talked a little bit about energy security in the U.S. and most of the  countries that were represented there, and how we share a concern,”  Schweitzer said recently during an interview at his office in Helena.  “We’ve become so dependent on oil from just a few unstable regimes, and  the sooner we get to a new energy source that’s cleaner, greener, more  sustainable, it’s better for everybody. Coal can have a future if we  have a solution to CO2” — that is, a way to burn coal and contain the  greenhouse gas — “or it doesn’t have a future if we don’t.”

But Arch Coal, and every other coal company in the business of making  money, isn’t waiting for a solution. Arch, the second-largest U.S. coal  producer, has paid about $160 million to lease from the state of  Montana and Great Northern Properties 1.4 billion tons of Otter Creek  coal on about 18,000 acres. The company is now seeking regulatory  approval for what would be the state’s largest coal mine.

Meanwhile, Arch is arranging a way to ship the coal  to Asia. On July 1, Arch, Warren Buffet’s BNSF Railway, and billionaire  Forrest E. Mars Jr. purchased the Tongue River Railroad Company, which  holds a valuable federal permit to build a 121-mile rail link between  Miles City and Decker, with a spur connecting to the Otter Creek tracts,  at an estimated cost of $550 million. Earlier this year, Arch acquired a  38 percent stake in Millennium Bulk Terminals, which is attempting to build an export terminal in Longview on the Columbia River, the idea being that the coal from Otter Creek could travel by  rail to Longview and from there be shipped to Asia. The company also  announced a deal to ship coal to Asia through a Canadian port near  Prince Rupert, British Columbia. “These options will help us to meet our  strategic objective of expanding coal sales from the Powder River Basin  and the Western Bituminous Region into the world’s largest and  fastest-growing coal market,” reads Arch’s annual report. The Powder  River Basin, spanning southeastern Montana and northeastern Wyoming,  supplies about 40 percent of the country’s coal.

For all his “clean coal” caveats, Schweitzer is on board. In January,  he traveled to Longview to encourage the Cowlitz County Board of  Commissioners to approve Arch’s export terminal. “We have 56 counties in  the state of Montana, but the most important county to the people of  Montana today is Cowlitz County,” Schweitzer reportedly said. In March  2010, Schweitzer tried to force local governments to sign a statement  supporting development of Otter Creek coal by holding hostage federal  stimulus funds — an ultimately unsuccessful, illegal and somewhat  perplexing attempt to link federal funds with the things Montana coal  could buy.

If Montana permits Otter Creek, the state stands to make a fortune.  Schweitzer says royalties would amount to between $5 and $7 billion over  30 years, and as much as $300 million per year for the Montana  Legislature to allot.

“We have coal,” he says. “It creates a lot of jobs. And if it’s not  produced here, it’ll be produced someplace else. Those boilers in Taiwan  or Korea, they’re either going to burn Indonesian, Australian, or  Russian coal, or they’re going to burn coal [shipped] from the Pacific  Northwest, maybe Montana. And I’d like to create jobs … not just mining  it; it’s jobs reclaiming it, and it’s jobs shipping it. Those are all  good jobs.”

And it’s not just Otter Creek. There are a handful of other proposed  coal mines in central and eastern Montana. The state’s demonstrated coal  reserves amount to about 119 billion tons, almost a quarter of the  entire country’s. For a variety of reasons it hasn’t made economic sense  to tap most of the trove. Asia’s coal demand, a new railroad, and the  enticement of, in Schweitzer’s words, “a pretty good lump of money” may  change that.

China can’t get enough. The world’s biggest producer  and consumer of coal used about 3.2 billion tons of it in 2010, about  three times U.S. consumption. It also has roughly 115 billion tons of  proven reserves. In 2009, China imported 126 million tons of coal, a  relatively small amount, but in doing so, the country became a net  importer for the first time, a shift that Stanford University  researchers Richard K. Morse and Gange He, in a 2010 paper, called “one of the most dramatic realignments” the global coal market has ever seen.

Where some in the U.S. and other nations see dependence on imported  energy as a threat to national security, the opposite view is burgeoning  in Asia, says Deborah Seligsohn, a Beijing-based senior fellow with the  World Resources Institute.  “There’s a growing view in China that imports of coal improve energy  security rather than hurt energy security, because then you have more  left at home. So if you need it, you have it.”

Coal fuels the world’s fastest growing major economy. Home to more  than 1.3 billion people, China has seen a more than tenfold increase in  GDP since 1978.

I was in China in June, as part of an environmental exchange  program through the University of Montana’s Maureen and Mike Mansfield  Center. During my travels in Guizhou Province, in southwestern China,  where there are about 1,000 coal mines, I headed out on a seven-hour  drive that was shortened to four because a new highway had opened the  day before. In Guiyang, the capital of Guizhou, the government has spent  billions to construct a new city to the northwest, partly intended to  house city government. A cluster of more than a dozen nearly identical  skyscrapers at the same stage of construction rises from otherwise rural  ground.

The incredible pace of China’s growth, and the energy it demands,  underscores the relative insignificance of one or a few Montana coal  mines feeding China’s power plants. Montana currently produces about 44  million tons of coal per year (Wyoming’s production is about 10 times  that), and Otter Creek would produce about 30 million tons annually.

“We’re not even a drop in the barrel,” says Schweitzer.

But the development of Otter Creek could matter in  terms of climate change, says Steve Running, a University of Montana  professor of forest ecology and member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.  Running calculates the combustion of Otter Creek coal would result in  about 2.5 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions over the life of the  mine. That’s 50 times Montana’s annual emissions.

“I know we’re doomed to using coal for the next number of years,”  Running says. “You hope it’s no more than five or 10 years. But for God  sakes, we shouldn’t be writing new leases like they are at Otter Creek. I  mean, that is, to me, obligating coal use far, far into the future in  exactly the way we should not be doing.”

The mine’s estimated life is 40 years. “We better the hell be off of  coal in 40 years or it’s game over,” Running says. “It really is.”

Running says atmospheric CO2 has reached 394 parts per  million. He says he doesn’t know what number represents a tipping point,  beyond which feedback loops — like polar ice caps melting into water that  absorbs more heat, thereby melting more ice caps — make it impossible to  reverse the trend. “The reality is, it’s not impossible that we’ve  passed a tipping point already, or we may be a good ways away.” In any  case, he says that of the ways people can generate power, “coal is the  dirtiest, least efficient way to do it of anything ever devised.”

“Every way you slice and dice the issue, coal loses,” Running adds,  “except for cheap. The only thing it has going for it is cheap. And it’s  cheap because of this artifact, that we’re letting (people) use the  atmosphere as a free garbage can.”

Climate change also happens to be at the center of a  legal challenge to the state’s decision, in March 2010, to lease Otter  Creek coal tracts to Arch. Two months later, the Montana Environmental  Information Center and the Sierra Club filed suit alleging that the  Montana Land Board, made up of the state’s top five elected officials  (currently all Democrats), failed to consider the mine’s potential  effect on climate change when it approved the lease by a vote of 3-2. In  January, Montana District Judge Joe Hegel rejected an attempt by the  state and Arch to dismiss the case, and questioned whether the lease  should have been awarded prior to an environmental review under the  Montana Environmental Policy Act.

The case was complicated earlier this year when the Montana  Legislature amended MEPA to limit consideration of an action’s impacts  to within Montana’s borders. If MEIC and the Sierra Club prevail in the  case, forcing the state to cancel the Otter Creek lease and go through  the MEPA process, it’s unclear which version of MEPA would apply. What  could also be at issue is whether the new MEPA complies with Montanans’  constitutional right to a “clean and healthful environment.”

“It seems to make a mockery of MEPA and our constitution,” says  MEIC’s Anne Hedges of the Legislature's change. "That is going to be an  issue that’s surely going to be before the courts, and it is going to be  before the courts, my guess is, on this case.”

Hegel has scheduled oral arguments on the summary judgment motion for  Sept. 27, in Broadus. A decision will likely not come for months.

Hedge’s objections to shipping Montana coal to Asia extend far beyond  exacerbating climate change. She points to the irony in those ships  returning to the U.S. stocked with renewable energy technologies. China  leads the world in the manufacturing of solar panels and wind turbines.

“We get the pollution,” she says. “They get our cheap coal products.  We get the water pollution. We get the permanent scars on our landscape.  We get the ruining of a lot of our ag heritage, and for what? To sell  them cheap coal."

Tomorrow: A visit with a rancher concerned about the rail plans and a look at the prospects for shipping more coal through the Otter Creek area.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal