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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,975 posts)
Thu Nov 9, 2023, 11:15 AM Nov 2023

The $2 Million Coal Mine That Might Hold a $37 Billion Treasure

Last edited Thu Nov 9, 2023, 12:11 PM - Edit history (1)

I'm at work. I don't have access to The Wall Street Journal. To get more, I'll have to go to the Gale database at the library or wait for another news outlet to pick up the story. Someone else will run this.

The $2 Million Coal Mine That Might Hold a $37 Billion Treasure

Wyoming discovery could be America’s first new source of rare-earth elements since 1952

The rare-earths find at a site owned by Ramaco Resources comes as the U.S. works to secure supplies of the minerals for use in electric vehicles and offshore wind turbines., among other purposes.

By Julie Steinberg | Photographs by Louise Johns for The Wall Street Journal
https://twitter.com/JBSteins
julie.steinberg@wsj.com
Nov. 9, 2023 5:30 am ET

Twelve years ago, former Wall Street banker Randall Atkins bought an old coal mine outside Sheridan, Wyo., sight unseen, for about $2 million.

He thought the mine might eke out a profit. Instead, Atkins recently learned it could bring a windfall.

{paywall}

This story might not be that new.

Coal country to carbon innovation: Wyoming rare earths discovery could be a game changer for US

Amanda Stutt | May 18, 2023 | 11:34 am



Brook mine property in Wyoming. Image from Ramaco Resources.

While many majors are walking away from the coal business to improve ESG metrics and appease investors, some savvy miners are looking at ways to advance clean energy projects on current and former coal mine sites. ... Rare earths, essential elements to realizing an electrified economy, are being discovered latent in some old coal mines – which are seen as environmental legacy liabilities all over North America.

Ramaco Resources, (NASDAQ: METC) a Kentucky-headquartered pure play metallurgic coal miner with operations in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, has this month discovered new potential magnetic rare earth elements (REEs) at its Brook mine in Wyoming, the state which produces about 47% of the country’s coal and where virtually all coal is thermal.

Ramaco’s subsidiary, Ramaco Carbon, is partnering with laboratories, researchers, and manufacturers and is privately investing to create an ecosystem of carbon tech innovation — building what it calls Carbon Valley in Wyoming.

The discovery was made in a partnership with a federal research team from the Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), with validation from independent analysts at mining consultancy Weir International — and could pose a potential solution to growing demand that has eluded the US.

{snip, and there's no paywall here}
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The $2 Million Coal Mine That Might Hold a $37 Billion Treasure (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Nov 2023 OP
I remember this being reported couple of months ago unc70 Nov 2023 #1
Probably by me, and I forgot all about it. Let me see what I can find. mahatmakanejeeves Nov 2023 #2
finally. my environmental pet peeve getting some oxygen- mopinko Nov 2023 #3
green jobs for former coalminers. CoopersDad Nov 2023 #6
Wouldn't be ironic... Think. Again. Nov 2023 #4
Check out "Mineville," NY OKIsItJustMe Nov 2023 #7
Viewable archive copy of the Nov 9 article (and how in general to find these) progree Nov 2023 #5

mopinko

(70,542 posts)
3. finally. my environmental pet peeve getting some oxygen-
Thu Nov 9, 2023, 01:13 PM
Nov 2023
The Biden administration has already begun to look at coal ash, coal waste, and acid mine drainage as feedstock for rare earths. The United States government announced in April it has set aside $450 million to advance clean energy projects on current and former coal mine sites, giving special attention to those that can provide new economic opportunities for coal communities.

Think. Again.

(9,345 posts)
4. Wouldn't be ironic...
Thu Nov 9, 2023, 01:20 PM
Nov 2023

...if many old coal mines (or current ones too) became the source for the minerals we need for the non-CO2 energy industry?

progree

(10,975 posts)
5. Viewable archive copy of the Nov 9 article (and how in general to find these)
Thu Nov 9, 2023, 01:32 PM
Nov 2023
https://archive.li/NErbx

Folks, you can almost always find the full-length "archive" copy by going to archive.ph and pasting in the URL into the black box "I want to search the archive for saved snapshots" of the article you are looking for, in this case: Xttps://www.wsj.com/business/energy-oil/the-2-million-coal-mine-that-might-hold-a-37-billion-treasure-181dbdcf

except replace the Xttps in the beginning with https
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