Nitrogen Inertization At San Juan Coal Company’s Longwall Operation

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Stephen L. Bessinger Jacques F. Abrahamse Kevin A. Bahe Gregory E. McCluskey T. Arthur Palm
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
2424 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

Introduction Basis For System San Juan Coal Company (SJCC) is a subsidiary of BHP Billiton. Until recently, BHP Billiton operated three surface mines in northwestern New Mexico: Navajo, San Juan, and La Plata. The San Juan and La Plata Mines supplied the San Juan Generating Station operated by Public Service of New Mexico. Stripping ratios at those operations were increasing, and by 2000 a feasibility study was underway to develop SJCC’s vast underground reserves as a replacement. Early in the evaluation and planning phase for the San Juan Underground Mine, it was determined that the target seams (Fruitland #8 and #9) had a high propensity for spontaneous combustion. Spontaneous combustion was identified as a risk, both to personnel and equipment, and to the ability of SJCC to reliably fulfill its obligation to the power plant. In the last 20 years, several western US coal mines suffered underground spontaneous combustion events and/or mine fires. Included in this group were Colorado Westmoreland’s Orchard Valley Mine (1987), RAG’s Willow Creek Mine (1998 and 2000), Oxbow’s Sanborn Creek Mine (1999), the West Elk Mine of Arch Coal (2000), Arch’s Skyline Mine (2002), Western Fuels’ Deserado Mine (1996), and the West Ridge Mine of Andalex Resources (2003). The cause for the majority of these fires was spontaneous combustion. Fighting the fires required injection of an inert gas or foam. Nitrogen and carbon dioxide were the predominant choices of inert gas. In all cases, the gasses had to be trucked in from considerable distances. Before the inert gas could be used, injection holes had to be drilled into or near the suspected fire locations. This drilling and trucking caused costly delays in the timing of the fire fighting effort, and was not as precise as desirable. Emergency purchasing of gas and pumping services was extremely expensive, running as high as $70,000 per day at one mine. As a result of the experience of other western US coal operators, and the risk inherent with spontaneous combustion at SJCC, it was decided to pursue installation of a nitrogen delivery facility on-site at SJCC. This decision was later expanded to include a continuous supply of nitrogen.
Citation

APA: Stephen L. Bessinger Jacques F. Abrahamse Kevin A. Bahe Gregory E. McCluskey T. Arthur Palm  (2005)  Nitrogen Inertization At San Juan Coal Company’s Longwall Operation

MLA: Stephen L. Bessinger Jacques F. Abrahamse Kevin A. Bahe Gregory E. McCluskey T. Arthur Palm Nitrogen Inertization At San Juan Coal Company’s Longwall Operation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2005.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account