BILLINGS, MONT.
Federal officials are being asked to investigate whether a financially-troubled coal company has posted sufficient bonds to cover future reclamation work at its mines in the U.S. and Canada.
The Western Organization of Resource Councils, a Montana-based conservation group, said Wednesday that it was concerned that a bankruptcy by Westmoreland Coal Company could leave taxpayers to cover future reclamation costs.
The group asked the Interior Department to investigate.
Westmoreland, which is based in Englewood, Colorado, told The Associated Press in a statement that it is in full compliance with bonding regulations for all of its mines.
“Westmoreland is 100 percent bonded by independent surety companies for the full costs of reclamation at all of its sites worldwide,” the company said.
Bonds are required under U.S. and Canada laws to cover potential cleanup and reclamation costs incurred by taxpayers if a mining company is unable to carry out the work.
Westmoreland sold 50 million tons of coal last year from its mines in Montana, Wyoming, New Mexico, Texas, North Dakota, Ohio, Alberta and Saskatchewan.
Environmental regulators in Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota and Ohio told AP that Westmoreland was up to date on its bond obligations.
In Texas, Westmoreland has been asked to provide an additional $3.2 million in bonds for its Jewett mine south of Dallas. The request came after the mine’s reclamation costs were recalculated by regulators, said Ramona Nye, a spokeswoman for the state Railroad Commission, which oversees the energy industry. Documents provided by Westmoreland showed that one of its customers, the power company NRG, is under contract to cover any additional bond obligations for Jewett.
In Alberta, which holds $149 million in securities for the company’s mines, officials said they did not know if that amount was sufficient to cover reclamation costs because Westmoreland has not yet submitted its annual liability report.
Information on Westmoreland’s mines in New Mexico and Saskatchewan was not immediately available.
“It’s not clear to us what mines are sufficiently bonded versus what mines are not,” said Beth Kaeding, chair of the Western Organization of Resource Councils. “We don’t know what will happen in a mine area that’s not sufficiently bonded. We don’t believe it’s the taxpayer’s responsibility. It’s the company’s.”
The Interior Department’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement did not have an immediate response to the group’s request for an investigation, agency spokesman Chris Holmes said.
Westmoreland disclosed last month in an annual report submitted to securities regulators that it was considering filing for bankruptcy protection. It appeared to get a temporary reprieve this week, receiving an extension until June 15 on the default date for a loan previously valued at more than $300 million, securities filings show.
The company reported $673 million in surety bonds and letters of credit to cover future reclamation work, and listed $773 million in “projected final reclamation costs” for its mines.
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