IC 8805 Demonstrated Reserve Base Of U. S. Coals With Potential For Use In The Manufacture Of Metallurgical Coke

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
William S. Sanner
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
158
File Size:
41975 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

A demonstrated reserve base (DRB) of bituminous coal suitable for cokemaking has been estimated based on the latest published information on U.S. coal reserves. Bureau of Mines analyses of raw coalbed samples were used to classify the coals as low-, medium-, and high-volatile bituminous and grade them as premium, marginal, and latent coking coals. Coal rank was used as the basis for identifying coking coals, and ash and sulfur content were used to determine coking coal grade. The demonstrated reserve base of coking coal for the entire United States is 162.67 billion tons. However, only 18.96 billion tons are premium (metallurgical) grade, and between 80 and 99 percent occurs in the Eastern States. The demonstrated reserve base of marginal-grade coking coal is 31.3 billion tons; more than half the marginal reserve base is in the Eastern States, and most of the medium- and low-volatile marginal coals are in the Eastern States. The Eastern and Midwestern States contain most of the latent-grade DRB of 112.4 billion tons; most (106.6 billion tons) is high-volatile coal, and 98 percent of the medium- and low-volatile latent coals occur in the Eastern States. Based on the worst assumption, which assumes that only premium-grade coals are used for cokemaking, the DRB for high-volatile coal would suffice for 127 years, the medium-volatile coal for 80 years, and the low-volatile coal for 83 years.
Citation

APA: William S. Sanner  (1979)  IC 8805 Demonstrated Reserve Base Of U. S. Coals With Potential For Use In The Manufacture Of Metallurgical Coke

MLA: William S. Sanner IC 8805 Demonstrated Reserve Base Of U. S. Coals With Potential For Use In The Manufacture Of Metallurgical Coke. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1979.

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