Exclusive: Most U.S. states lost coal mining jobs in
2017 – data
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[January 19, 2018]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nearly two-thirds of
U.S. coal producing states lost coal mining jobs in 2017, even as
overall employment in the downtrodden sector grew modestly, according to
preliminary government data obtained by Reuters.
The statistics come as the administration of President Donald Trump
claims credit for new jobs in the coal industry, a business he has
promised to revive by rolling back Obama-era environmental regulations.
Unreleased full-year coal employment data from the Mining Health and
Safety Administration shows total U.S. coal mining jobs grew by 771 to
54,819 during Trump’s first year in office, led by Central Appalachian
states like West Virginia, Virginia, and Pennsylvania - where coal
companies have opened a handful of new mining areas.
"You know, West Virginia is doing fantastically well," Trump told
Reuters in an interview this week about the state, which gained 1,345
coal jobs last year, according to the data.
"It’s great coal."
But the industry also lost jobs in other Appalachian states like Ohio,
Kentucky, and Maryland; the western Powder River Basin states Montana
and Wyoming; as well as in several other states like Indiana, New
Mexico, and Texas.
Texas lost the largest number, at 455, and Ohio was a close second,
losing 414, according to the data.
Pennsylvania, which gained 96 jobs in 2017, is also expected to go
negative soon after Dana Mining announced this month it would close a
mine employing about 400 people.
Overall, the number of U.S. coal jobs is still lingering near historic
lows at less than one-third the level in the mid-1980s, according to
Bureau of Labor Statistics data, as the industry loses market share to
cheaper natural gas.
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A bulldozer moves coal at the Murray Energy Corporation port
facility in Powhatan Point, Ohio, U.S., November 7, 2017.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
(Click here for a graphic: http://tmsnrt.rs/2DOsZk2)
Trump had campaigned on a promise to revive the coal industry, and since taking
office he has begun rolling back climate change and other environmental
regulations, and expanded leases on federal lands, in an effort to do so.
While the effort has cheered the coal industry, it has had little impact on
domestic demand for coal, with U.S. utilities still shutting coal-fired power
plants at a rapid pace and shifting to cheaper natural gas.
Luke Popovich, a spokesman for the National Mining Association, said the bright
spots in the industry in 2017 came amid a big surge in demand for shipments from
overseas - but he also credited support from the administration.
"We have seen production rise this past year by more than six percent and
exports rise five-fold over the previous year," he told Reuters.
"Honest people can differ over how much credit the president deserves for this
revival and how much credit belongs to market forces. To those of us closest to
the coal industry, there is little question that the administration’s regulatory
reset ... has made a decisive difference.”
(Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Marguerita Choy)
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