Coal fires 33% of US electricity even with the war on coal. To say nobody wants it is just emotional twaddle. As an export too, a good trade. That's what we're doing mostly. In my neighborhood.
Exporting to Chile, South Korea, Japan - pacific rim countries mostly.
Most of the boys I know have heavy equipment, including a 19 year old across the road from me. We like to think in terms of loading railroad cars, makin' $135 an hour revenue, clearing over $100 an hour if we're going to bother working with something like coal.
I use the ash from the Healy coal mine and power plants to build roads. When I am on that side of the valley. They got loaders that make my 55,000 lb dump truck look like a Tonka toy. This is the one they load me with:
I see this dredge every day in the summer when I am on the North side of Denali National Park building roads:
You are looking at where I build most of the time. On the other side of that valley. I dug the basement for one of the Usibeli's that own this mine, this piece of equipment pictured above. Do you see the truck in the foreground? These are the jobs that come with with coal. Operating, maintaining, fabricating for this scale of production. I know the lead fabricator at the main road building outfit for them - he's over $50 an hour base pay. The two power plants at the face of the mine - all great jobs.
Inside the plants and mine offices you have all the college educated people. Quality control people, engineers, water, financial analysts, division managers, etc. Six figure jobs.
The railroad jobs that take the coal out. The merchant seaman on the ships. The crane and equipment workers at port - everywhere you look is highly paid work even a high school graduate can do, all stemming from coal and its ancillary industries.
The regular guys at the mine operating equipment with any kind of seniority like me are about $34 an hour and obscene benefits. They clock a lot of overtime, a lot of $50 + an hour days. A ten hour day on overtime? $500. I could hire on there, but I am a contractor and like what I am doing just fine.
There isn't a Wal-Mart. There isn't a McDonald's. Off the highway, there's not one traffic light in town. People stock up. There's almost zero low-wage employment except for the summer when foreign workers come in to the hotels and t-shirt shops at the entrance to Denali National Park.
Then you have the school teachers, the public administration, the police and fire yadda yadda - all great jobs too, stemming from coal. There's no sales taxes, no property taxes, because they tax coal production. There's no income taxes because it is Alaska. The school is free. Coal means free schools.
Not only are these great paying jobs, but there are no taxes at the state and local level. So you can bank more of your pay. Free heat too, for mine workers and coal pickers.
Can you imagine? No property taxes. No sales taxes. Because of coal. There's a hotel-motel tax too, to stiff the tourists. But coal is king.
This is what the coal seams look like, they go for over 100 miles:
Me, the wife and kids went up to that very set of seams last summer and got some coal. They'd had a flood at the base of it and we couldn't get the truck right up to the face. I can come in there with a loader though and take a dump truck load out, nobody cares.
All the workers get free coal so there isn't much personal use harvesting. Plenty of trees around close to people's cabins for firewood too. We mostly sled trees home in the winter but I thought about swinging by this spot for a load of coal I could take home at the end of the season. We had to pull out early, family medical emergency, but will be back next season.
Between those coal seams is volcanic ash: telling a fascinating story. The organic material is growing along minding its own business, and staggering amounts of volcanic ash is produced from eruptions to bury it all and make coal. A new layer of organics manages to populate the barren wasteland, and then another eruption(s). Three layers of coal that you can see at the base of this spot above.
We have, as a practical matter, a billion years of coal. In a lot of places around this state there are seams free for the taking. The ones jutting out by the ocean are the easiest to get at, seems to me. The ocean does all the work for you.
No need to hate on coal, the PC era of virtue-signaling is over. It's like the people cutting their backs in the name of Christ. Making electricity more expensive, gutting these high-paying jobs to show how "environmentally conscious" we are. ********. Coal can burn clean and carbon dioxide is plant food. It's nonsense.