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Uke


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Thanks NO'bama!
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Thousands no longer working on the railroad after coal industry crash

By Mike Landis | 

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - David Wilkerson worked on the railroad for almost 30 years. He said there were a lot of good times during his career with the Frisco, later Burlington Northern, and eventually BNSF.

" It was good and kind of exciting at times. Kind of like a free life," David laughed. "It is the scenery and travel...Of course, paydays weren't too bad. That was one thing that kept you hanging on."

And, there were some not so great times.

"I was laid off probably (I was lucky) four or five times," he said.

Furloughs and layoffs on the rail line come and go with the ups and downs of the economy. But times are tougher now than they've been in a long time. Railroad industry analysts say the downturn in business is partly because of a slowing economy. It's also largely because of what some call the War on Coal.

In hopes of encouraging renewable energy such as solar and wind, last year the Obama Administration enacted environmental polices cracking down on coal use. Natural gas is cleaner and cheaper, so many plants have switched to that fuel. That's what Springfield City Utilities did at its James River power plant months ago (CU continues to burn coal at its John Twitty Energy Center, the utility's main power generation source).

 

As a result of declining demand, coal train traffic is down between 30% to 40%.

"You don't see near as many coal trains coming through," said Wilkerson. "It was pretty saturated with coal trains for a while."

Across the nation, at least 15,000 workers among among the nation's largest rail companies are furloughed. BNSF Railway, with a hub in Springfield, has 4,600 employees on the sidelines nationwide. Many of those are based out of the Springfield Division. However, the railroad won't say exactly how many.

This week, the railroad announced it was consolidating its Springfield Division offices with those located in Lincoln, NE.

"[Springfield] Division staff will continue to operate in Springfield and we don't expect that there will be any significant change in employee numbers," stated BNSF Railway spokesperson Andy Williams.

BNSF says capital investments in recent years have improved efficiency. The creation of the new Heartland Division will save money at this time when coal revenues are sharply down.

"This realignment of operations will create a leaner and more agile organization that is better positioned for growth and new business opportunities," Williams said.

Those impacted by the industry changes are waiting to see what comes next.

"It may get a little worse, but everybody is probably keeping their fingers crossed hoping it doesn't," David said.

When the price of natural gas goes back up, it's likely many power plants will revert to burning coal. However, BNSF says it does not anticipate coal volumes ever returning to what they were in the past.

Read the original version of this article at ky3.com.



-- Edited by Uke on Friday 3rd of June 2016 03:52:46 PM

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Hmm. That address doesnt look right.
It looks like the link pointing here was faulty.

Gah. Your tab just crashed.



Professional Asshole

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Thanks Obama!

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Force Majeure

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Thousands no longer working on the railroad after coal industry crash

In hopes of encouraging renewable energy such as solar and wind, last year the Obama Administration enacted environmental polices cracking down on coal use. Natural gas is cleaner and cheaper, so many plants have switched to that fuel. That's what Springfield City Utilities did at its James River power plant months ago (CU continues to burn coal at its John Twitty Energy Center, the utility's main power generation source).

When the price of natural gas goes back up, it's likely many power plants will revert to burning coal. However, BNSF says it does not anticipate coal volumes ever returning to what they were in the past.


 confuse 0'bama killed coal but when natural gas prices go up, they'll convert back to coal.

confuse OK.

Natural gas has a 40% price advantage per BTU over coal right now. I doubt very many railroaders would pay 40% more for their electricity if they could specify 100% coal generated power. Hell, most will drive across town to save a penny on gasoline.



-- Edited by Snippy on Friday 3rd of June 2016 07:08:14 PM

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Force Majeure

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Damn you, 0'bama. Your failed energy plan has made 'Murican Natural Gas Cheaper Than NUKES!
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no When are we going to stop the Muslim? He hates 'Murica.

 

http://wqad.com/2016/06/02/exelon-plans-to-shut-down-clinton-and-cordova-nuclear-plants/

It's 0'bama's fault that 'Murican natural gas is cheap. bastard!

The average total generating cost of a small nuclear plant like Kewaunee and Vermont Yankee is about $50 per megawatt-hour. A combined-cycle natural gas plant is competitiveprovided gas prices remain at or below $4 per million BTU, which is unlikely over the long term. Natural gas prices are volatile, and the cost of generation from a gas-fired plant is very sensitive to fuel price. At $5 per mmBTU for natural gas, the per-megawatt cost rises to $57; at $6 per mmBTU, the estimated cost is $64 per megawatt-hour.



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