Tennessee may allow coal mining in a protected forest this year
17 Jan 2024
A coal mine pond in Claiborne
County, Tennessee collects toxic leftovers from coal extraction.
A mining company is planning to extract coal from a mountain in
East Tennessee this year.
Hurricane
Creek Mining has applied for a permit to mine about 650 acres of land on
a mountain in Claiborne County. The mining would occur in an area north of
Knoxville that is part of protected land managed by The Nature Conservancy.
Members
of the public can comment on the project until Jan. 19. The state will accept
emailed comments to Dennis.Conger@tn.gov.
Coal
mining on a mountain
Hurricane
Creek Mining intends to extract coal through contour mining, a method of
surface coal mining that follows the contours of a mountain or hill. This means
the proposed acreage represents winding strips of mining as opposed to a single
chunk of land.
To
access the coal layer, the company will have to cut away the rock, soil and
trees above it. Then, the company will separate the coal layer into usable coal
and toxic leftovers, sometimes called tailings, which will be stored in about
30 artificial ponds.
After
the mining is complete, the company will be legally required to restore the
land to its natural contours and vegetative state.
In
recent years, however, that last step has often been skipped in Tennessee. More
than two-thirds of coal mine permits in the state are in bond forfeiture —
meaning the responsibility for cleanup has been transferred to the state
and the cost could fall to taxpayers.
“It
seems pretty clear that there’s not a solid market for coal and that a lot of
the other permit holders in the state are facing bankruptcy and bond
forfeitures,” said Gabe Schwartzman, an assistant professor of geography and
sustainability at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. “The likelihood that
this mine would end up in that situation seems high.”
In other words, a lot of mines
are basically abandoned, and potential pollution from those sites might not be
monitored. Coal mines, whether active or abandoned, create air and water
pollution and can increase flooding risks to nearby communities.
Tennessee’s
last new coal mine
Tennessee
last approved a new coal mine in 2020. The mine is in Campbell County, next to
Claiborne County, and was initially owned by a South Carolina company called
Davis Creek Energy, LLC. Eight months after getting the permit, the company got a notice of violation
for not submitting discharge reports — which are the results of water sampling
for various pollutants.
Three
months later, the permit changed ownership to Alden Resources, LLC, which is
based in Kentucky. That company got a notice of violation in 2022 because of
the following:
- “untreated
mine wastewater” was escaping the mine site through a sinkhole
- wastewater
ponds and ditches were not constructed prior to the disturbance of land
- systems for
the collection and treatment of mine wastewater and stormwater were “not
adequate”
- “uncontrolled
sediment” was entering or had the potential to enter protected waters
In
2023, the company also got a notice of violation after the state was notified
of a landslide. State officials confirmed a landslide near a road and pond that
connected to a protected waterway and concluded that a “leaking pond” was
the likely cause of the landslide.
The new
permit
Until
last year, a Kentucky-based company, Apollo Fuels, Inc., had a permit for surface
coal mining with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the site of the proposed
coal mine in Claiborne County. That permit was set up to be operational between
2014 and the end of 2024.
Last
June, the permit was transferred to Hurricane Creek Mining, LLC, a company
that appears to have formed in 2023 and has an associated address in
Claiborne County. In the fall, the company finalized applications to the
Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation for permits to pollute
water through mining and change water features.
Hurricane
Creek Mining said it has also been working with the Tennessee Wildlife
Resources Agency to develop a reclamation plan focused on elk habitat.
“Before
undertaking this project, Hurricane Creek evaluated all of our production costs
and requirements, including reclamation,” Johnny Asher, the company’s manager,
said in an email.