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II <br />II <br />SUMMARY <br />Federal coal reserves are currently being mined <br />by Mountain Coal Company (MCC) from their <br />West Elk Mine (Figure S-1). MCC presently <br />operates a longwall system of underground <br />mining, which is permitted with the Colorado <br />Division of Reclamation, Mining and Safety <br />(DAMS) for a production rate of 8.2 million <br />tons of coal per year. The West Elk Mine was <br />opened in 1981 and presently produces coal <br />from several existing federal coal leases. The <br />coal mined at the West Elk Mine, as well as <br />from other mines in the North Fork Valley, is a <br />high British Thermal Unit (BTU), low sulfur, <br />low ash, and low mercury coal. The coal meets <br />the Clean Air Act standards for compliant and <br />super-compliant coal. Its use in industry helps <br />meet standards of the Clean Air Act. As such, <br />there is a demand for coal from the West Elk <br />Mine and other mines in the North Fork Valley <br />by electric power generation industries. <br />In the past 5 years, operations at the West Elk <br />Mine have extracted coal from the B coal seam. <br />Recently, the West Elk Mine incorporated other <br />leased federal coal reserves to their State- <br />approved mine permit, and operations will be <br />moving into umnined reserves in the E coal <br />seam in the next few years. In addition, MCC <br />leased additional E Seam reserves to the <br />southeast of existing operations, which are a <br />logical extension of existing operations with an <br />effective date of March 1, 2007. <br />Based on experience mining other coal reserves <br />at the West Elk Mine, it is anticipated that <br />underground mining operations will encounter <br />quantities of naturally-occurring methane gas <br />that left unmitigated, will create hazardous <br />working conditions in the underground mine. In <br />order to continue operations to recover leased <br />federal coal reserves, the excess methane must <br />be evacuated from the underground workings <br />to reduce the explosion hazard and maintain <br />gas levels at safe operating conditions. The <br />Mine Safety and Health Administration <br />(MSHA) has requirements that underground <br />coal mines maintain methane concentrations <br />that are one percent or less. The method <br />demonstrated to be most effective in evacuating <br />methane gas from the underground workings is <br />to install vertical methane drainage wells <br />(MDW) from the land surface into the mine <br />workings. In some places, MDWs drilled at and <br />angle (i.e. `directionally drilled') are also <br />effective. Therefore, the mine has proposed a <br />project to install MDWs into the E Seam <br />mining operations. <br />Since 2001, the GMUG and the Forest Service <br />Rocky Mountain Regional Office have <br />analyzed and approved several methane <br />drainage projects to continue operations at the <br />West Elk Mine (see section Other Analyses <br />Completed in the Project Area). These project <br />decisions approved about 70 methane drainage <br />well locations and over 20 miles of road <br />construction. Some of these activities have <br />occurred in the West Elk Inventoried Roadless <br />Area (West Elk IRA). Operations and <br />contemporaneous reclamation have been on- <br />going since these approvals were given. <br />Implementation of these previous decisions <br />resulted in field data from the B Seam which <br />may be extrapolated for the E Seam which will <br />assist in this analysis. <br />In addition, as part of beginning to mine the E <br />seam reserves, the mine plan also calls for an <br />additional ventilation shaft and escapeway <br />(called the Deer Creek shaft) to support the <br />mine ventilation system, and provide for <br />underground worker safety. The access for this <br />shaft has been approved under a previous <br />NEPA decision (2006) for geotechnical work <br />and has already been constructed. Actual <br />construction and operation of the shaft are <br />included in the proposed action. <br />This environmental impact statement considers <br />the effects of installing MDWs and a <br />ventilation shaft and escapeway to facilitate <br />continued operations to recover leased federal <br />coal reserves. <br />Deer Creek Ventilation Shaft and E Seam Methane Drainage Wells DEIS S-1 <br />