Viper Mine announces closure

CWLP gets cheaper coal, local miners get the shaft

Viper Mine announces closure
CWLP recently approved a new contract to purchase coal from a mine in Hillsboro, which it says will lead to cost savings for its customers. Owners of the Viper Mine in Elkhart claim they have no choice but to close since the city changed suppliers.

Operations at the Viper Mine in Elkhart are shutting down after the city of Springfield chose a cheaper coal supplier for its electrical power plant.

The mine, which at its peak employed about 300 miners, now is down to a skeleton crew responsible for dismantling equipment, Jim Smith, president of Knight Hawk Coal, told Illinois Times.

Knight Hawk Coal operates the mine, which is owned by Arch Resources. The company acquired the International Coal Group in 2011 for $3.4 billion, which included the central Illinois mine.

“The facts are pretty straightforward. CWLP – the city of Springfield – has been the largest customer for that mine since it was built in 1982,” Smith said. “They were really the only remaining customer.  Other smaller customers had switched to gas or closed shop. They chose not to renew a contract, so we had no customer – we had no other alternative.”

Smith said once the city decided not to renew Viper’s contract, a decision was made to close the mine.

“We stopped producing in July, (but) we continued to ship coal to the city. They agreed to buy what we had on the ground.  And they've moved on,” he said.

But Doug Brown, chief utility engineer for City Water, Light & Power, told IT that Knight Hawk wanted to increase the price of its coal well above what the city had been paying.

“They basically came to us and said that they're going to have to raise the price of coal to $65 a ton… we knew that was well above market (rate),” Brown said. He said he told Knight Hawk the city would have to issue a request for proposals in light of the price increase.

“We can't just take that to the city council and do that to our customers. We have to be fully transparent and advocate for the lowest-cost fuel we can in hopes that maybe some competitive bidding might bring their price down,” Brown said.

Instead, Knight Hawk didn’t bother to submit a bid.

The city did receive bids from mines operated by Foresight Energy, the owner of the Deer Run Mine in Hillsboro, and another from a mine owner in southern Illinois, Brown said. The Hillsboro mine received the contract.

Brown said during the next four years, the typical CWLP residential customer will likely see their monthly electric bill drop less than 15 cents, as opposed to raising rates to cover the increased costs that would have resulted from continuing to purchase coal from Viper Mine.

“It's cheaper with the new contract. And we're going to save about $30 million dollars over the course of the four-year contract,” Brown said.

The Viper Mine in Elkhart is 20 miles from CWLP’s generators, while the Deer Run Mine in Hillsboro is 54 miles. Even with the additional trucking, the cost will be slightly less than what the utility has paid in the past, Brown said.

But this is little solace to the Elkhart miners who have lost their jobs.

State Sen. Sally Turner, R-Lincoln, said it is another economic hit for an area that has suffered more than its share in recent years.

She noted that Lincoln College and Lincoln Christian College have both closed and the state is considering shutting down Logan Correctional Center, Illinois’ main women’s prison, and rebuilding it closer to Chicago.

“People don't know where they stand on their present jobs – such as at the prison,” Turner said. “We just still don't know what's going to happen. So, they're on pins and needles wondering: ‘Should we move, should we go take a job somewhere else?’ That's hard, especially when you're just trying to make ends meet. I don't know of any new businesses or industry coming into Logan County.”

The closing of the mine increases the pain in an already hurting community, she said.

“I was in high school when the coal mine started, and that was huge.  A lot of my friends went to work out there. It's been a major employer for us for a long time. … That was a good salary for folks in our area,” Turner said.

At the time of its closure, Viper was the most northern mine operating in Illinois. However, the qualify of the coal limited its marketability, Smith, the Knight Hawk Coal president, said.

Smith said coal from the Logan County mine generated fewer British thermal units per ton compared to that extracted elsewhere in the state.

“It's a poor-quality coal,” he said. “So, it doesn't travel well. You couldn’t ship it overseas or anything. We've done that in the past when coal markets were crazy, but there's just no remaining customers.”

While there are 50 million tons of coal yet to be extracted from Viper Mine, Smith said it is unlikely it will ever reopen, even if demand for coal were to go back up.

“It would be more economically feasible to mine coal farther down the state,” he said.

Like all of the coal mines now operating in Illinois, Viper’s workforce was not unionized.  

Smith said a decision was made to shut down the mine quietly.

“I know that the mayor there in town knows. Everyone knows. …  So, it's no secret, but we just did not come out and formally announce anything. But just to put it on the record: The city did not renew the contract, so we had no alternatives.”