/

    Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

    Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

    To get started, first

    YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

      Alpha closing 8 mines, cutting 1,200 jobs in all

      MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — Coal producer Alpha Natural Resources said Tuesday it was cutting production by 16 million tons and eliminating 1,200 jobs companywide, laying off 400 workers immediately by closing mines in Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

      The mine shutdowns start Tuesday, while the rest of the layoffs will be completed by the end of the first quarter after Alpha fulfills current sales obligations, Chief Executive Officer Kevin Crutchfield said. In all, the layoffs amount to nearly a tenth of Alpha's 13,000-person workforce.

      Alpha said it was closing four mines in West Virginia, three in Virginia and one in Pennsylvania. They are a mix of deep and surface mines, and all are non-union operations.

      Company spokesman Ted Pile said most of the displaced workers may eventually be rehired, either assigned to new jobs in other locations or replacing outside contractors. Only 150 workers in West Virginia and three in Pennsylvania will not have any other employment opportunities with the company, he said.

      Though some miners will stay on to seal the operations, most will either be reassigned or laid off immediately.

      Support positions will also be cut proportionally as Alpha reduces its operating regions from four to two, Crutchfield said, and two executives will retire Nov. 1.

      It wasn't immediately what other states would be affected by the still looming layoffs.

      Crutchfield said the shutdowns and layoffs are a necessary part of ensuring Alpha survives in what has become a difficult U.S. market, where coal companies face a dual challenge: Power plants are shifting to cheap, abundant natural gas, while companies like his face "a regulatory environment that's aggressively aimed at constraining the use of coal."

      The affected West Virginia operations are the Alloy deep mine near Powellton, the Alloy surface mine near Boomer, the Premium highwall mine near Gilbert and the White Flame Surface Mine near Wharncliffe. The Virginia mines are Guest Mountain deep mines No. 8 and No. 9 near Norton, and the Twin Star Surface Mine near Hurley. In Pennsylvania, Alpha will close its Dora deep mine in Jefferson County.

      Bristol, Va.-based Alpha will cut production 16 million tons by early 2013 and reduce overhead by $150 million as it shifts away from thermal coal used in domestic power generation to concentrate on metallurgical coal used in steelmaking overseas.

      Globally, "there remains a structural undersupply" of metallurgical coal, Crutchfield said, and Alpha expects to see demand grow by more than 100 million tons by the end of the decade.

      Alpha's $7.1 billion acquisition of Massey Energy helped create "one of the most valuable met coal franchises in the world," Crutchfield said, effectively doubling its production potential. It has 25 million to 30 million tons of export capacity through the East Coast and the Gulf of Mexico, giving it the ability to scale up exports quickly, he said.

      About 40 percent of Alpha's production cuts will come from high-cost eastern mines "that are unlikely to be competitive for the foreseeable future," Crutchfield said, while about half will occur in the Powder River Basin, the largest coal-producing region in the U.S. The basin is located in northeast Wyoming.

      Alpha's Wyoming operations, Alpha Coal West, consist of the Eagle Butte and Belle Ayre surface coal mines. Together, the mines have about 650 employees and produce about 50 million tons of coal a year, according to the Wyoming Mining Association. The number of layoffs that might occur there was unclear.

      "We're still trying to figure out, with the reduction in production, what our operations will look like," said Mike Lepchitz, spokesman for the Belle Ayre Mine.

      Crutchfield said "the elimination of jobs on this scale is something I take very seriously."

      "Unfortunately," he said, "we think we have to do it to set the company on the right foot going forward."

      In the long run, the new strategy will create a leaner, more agile company that can readily adapt to changing market circumstances, he said.

      Politicians — mostly Republican — across the coalfields were quick to pounce on the announcement as further evidence that President Barack Obama's administration is waging a "war on coal" through new air-pollution standards, but many U.S. power companies have long planned to close or convert some of their aging, inefficient coal-fired plants.

      "A group of government bureaucrats have decided the coal industry isn't something that they like, so they're going to try to force it out of business," said U.S. Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Va. "This is appalling and it must stop."

      In West Virginia, fellow Republican Rep. Shelley Moore Capito said her constituents want to stay in their home state and raise their families, "but the president's extreme policies are cripplingly entire towns and making it harder for workers to find jobs."

      The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration said the number of mining jobs in West Virginia fell by about 1,300 in the second quarter as other coal companies laid off workers and idled operations or shifted resources.

      Chris Hamilton, vice president of the West Virginia Coal Association, said layoffs are likely to continue through the end of the year and into the first quarter as operators struggle with both regulations and the loss of traditional customers such as power plants.

      "There's no sign of that easing up anytime soon," he said. "We're clearly on the valley floor here of the cyclic nature of the industry."

      ___

      Associated Press writer Mead Gruver contributed from Cheyenne, Wyo.

      Loading...
       

      24 comments

      • kythumper  •  1 mth 22 days ago
        Is it really the EPA that did this or is it actually the low price of natural gas that makes coal unfeasible??????
      • geezer  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        "Now It Begins"...The big hurt!

        Does anyone know that the very best and strongest nylon used to be made from Coal? That nylon was the best carpet fiber.

        Now we have replaced nylon from coal to CORN!
        With the drought and failed Corn crops, what now?

        New regulations, 4 times Ethnol now, to be used in fuel by 2020. 40%!

        (Retired from 35 years in flooring)
      • george  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Well now,da boy would tell you ....you are better off than you were 4 years ago.Now you dont have to get out of that nice warm bed every day to go to work.....Vote in nov... people.....I pray every day for help,if da boy gets reelected only God can save US......
      • thinker  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Electricity cost will "necessarily skyrocket" under my plan says king Barry.. Over thirty coal fired generation plants shut down, another seventy on the chopping block and thousands of jobs already gone with many more losses to come.
      • 4 2 b a voice  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        WELL Obummer got his way! No get ready for the price to heat and cool your home to skyrocket! OH WAIT! You might not have a home he wants those also!
      • khiem  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        By these actions, I presume the coal miners, the 10% of the population of West Virginia who WORK for a living, will have to join the 90% already on Welfare, ADC, Food Stamps, etc.! These actions will NOW ensure that the Socialist Democratic/Obama Administration Program of putting EVERYONE on Uncle Sam's Plantation has at least succeeded in ONE STATE! Vote for Obama in November to ENSURE that the other 56 States can follow suit!
      • Bill  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Great Job Obama, focusing on those jobs with a laser.
      • gotcha  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        our government is pumping out a 1000 new regulation a week. the reason CONTROL CONTROL CONTROL obama is putting his foot on all our throats! the creep in chief has to go before were all standing in the bread line! PRESIDENT ROMNEY starting in 2013
      • dumble door  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        It's the Obama/Chicago Way. Enact regulations to create a crisis. When people squeal, here comes big government to the rescue!
      • Jeff  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Obama said he would shut down coal plants. No surprise. How's that "algae" workin' out for ya?
      • snoopy woodstock  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Way to go obama !
      • hadenoughyet  •  1 mth 22 days ago
        Thanks obozo, for driving away American jobs so you can give money to all those fantastic green companies. POS
      • Bad Bob  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Thank Obama/Soetoro, more jobs lost. The nigure has got to go before he has the entire country on welfare. Purity needs to return to the "White House".
      • Edward Casey  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        1300 more American jobs lost as a direct result of Obama's misguided and ignorant "war on coal."
      • Bama Boy  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Ddon't you people get it? This is Part of Obama's jobs building program. If we don't mine coal, the miners go on the public ddole and have to depend on Obama for thier next hand-out. He STOPPED the oil pipeline in it's tracks defeating thousands of jobs. Now how could anybody vote against a real smart operator like that? BAma Boy
      • Bruce  •  1 mth 20 days ago
        Hope and Change....Kill Jobs...Kill Border Agents...Kill Embassy Workers....Death and Misery ... Forward
      • P-47 THUNDERBOLT  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        Meanwhile, Obama is jumping up and down with glee.
      • richard  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        I guess muslims hate coal
      • gotcha  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        not only are we going to pay much more for electric but more in tax's this is the back door approach on raising tax's. and my back door has had enough of rising cost from food to gas for my car! Romney 2012
      • Candalee  •  1 mth 23 days ago
        I am so sick of Obama's war on the coal miners and the coal industry. They have been supplying this country with fuel and energy for generations. His attacks on them is an attack on America and the American people.
      • Coal company to lay off 156 workers in Utah, Ill.

        A coal producer owned by a longtime critic of President Barack Obama's energy policies will lay off nearly 160 workers at Illinois and Utah mines, blaming the freshly re-elected president for a "war on coal."

      • Texas judge to rule on disruptive JetBlue pilot
        Texas judge to rule on disruptive JetBlue pilot

        A federal judge is expected to rule on whether a JetBlue Airways pilot who disrupted a flight by running through the plane and yelling about terrorists can go free.

      • Pope starts new Vatican department to promote Latin
        Pope starts new Vatican department to promote Latin

        VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Benedict on Saturday started a new Vatican department to promote the study and use of Latin in the Roman Catholic Church and beyond. The old-style Latin Mass was phased out more than 40 years ago in favor of local languages, but the pope is giving it another try. Latin remains the official language of the universal church. The Vatican said the pope had instituted the Pontifical Academy for Latin Studies, placing it under the auspices of the Vatican's ministry for culture. ...

      • Change in the 112th Congress

        Now that Election 2012 is over, except for some results still being tabulated, here's a look at who's not coming back to Washington for the 113th Congress. Below is the list of members who resigned, lost reelection, or decided other jobs were best for them.

      • US computer scientist, Indian literary critic, Japanese biologist win Kyoto Prize

        TOKYO - An American regarded as a father of computer graphics, an Indian literary critic and a Japanese molecular cell biologist have received the Kyoto Prize, Japan's highest private award for global achievement.

      • Ohio farmer accused of letting dogs live in filth

        An Amish farmer in Ohio is accused of keeping dozens of dogs in gruesome settings, including injured animals living in feces a foot deep.

      • Former Citi chief Pandit gets $6.7 million bonus
        Former Citi chief Pandit gets $6.7 million bonus

        Citigroup has paid its former CEO Vikram Pandit, who resigned abruptly last month, a bonus of $6.7 million for work he did for the bank this year.

      • BBC chief quits after saying TV report was wrong
        BBC chief quits after saying TV report was wrong

        The BBC's top executive resigned Saturday night after the prestigious broadcaster's marquee news magazine wrongly implicated a British politician in a child sex-abuse scandal, deepening the crisis that exploded after it decided not to air similar allegations against one of its own stars who police now say was one of the nation's worst pedophiles.

      Follow Yahoo! News

      Brought to you byYahoo! Finance