Coal 1n Western Canada and Its Uses

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. M. Williams
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
4940 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

WESTERN CAN ADA'S coal industry has experienced a serious set-back since 1949, following a pattern well known to its counterpart in the United States. The loss in coal markets in Western Canada has been particularly severe as the discovery of large reserves of oil and natural gas and the subsequent construction of re-fineries and pipelines roughly coincided with the dieselization of both main railways. While the coal industry will have to face a further decline in markets of long standing, others with a large growth potential can be se-cured if present marketing methods are changed where needed and if fundamental and applied research programmes are actively pursued. The energy and chemical potential of Western Canada's coals will eventually find their place in the ever-growing needs of industry and electric power producers. Electric power generation would appear to offer the largest and most immediate market for coal. If the coal industry is to serve this market adequately and gain as much of it as possible, coal operators ? must have a good knowledge of certain characteristics -of the electric utility industry and its fuel requirements. This paper is prepared primarily to set out some of these characteristics, but also discusses other probable markets for coal.
Citation

APA: M. M. Williams  (1958)  Coal 1n Western Canada and Its Uses

MLA: M. M. Williams Coal 1n Western Canada and Its Uses. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1958.

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