The Cost Savings of Steam Today.
NW Mailing List
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org
Sat Jan 12 19:18:50 EST 2008
Alex,
You are correct I didn't include much information on coal price
volatility. This paper was more of an overview. Sometime maybe I
can write the uncondensed book version. I left a great deal out on
the account of length.
On Jan 12, 2008, at 9:58 AM, NW Mailing List wrote:
> John,
>
> I glanced through your paper to see how you had addressed the
> volatility in coal pricing and assumptions about type of coal used
> to achieve a desired BTU. Not very much information was reaadily
> apparent other than a reference to EIA forecasts which I looked at
> and saw oil and coal price trends were expected to stay the same.
> That leaves me with a number of questions since the paper is about
> economic analysis of alternative fuels. Besides which various
> other respondents are addressing the operational and engineering
> factors.
I was using the 4 high BTU coals tracked by the EIA. Northern and
Central Appalachian, Illinois and Colorado. Each Class I RR had a
different coal blend based on geographic region. For instance the
comparison for BNSF and UP was using 75% Colorado Coal and 25%
Illinois Coal.
>
> 1) Are you using mine face pricing or delivered pricing. I
> calculated you were using about $41.50 per ton of coal which I
> assume is delivered price?
I was using spot market prices. Contract prices would however be
lower than these.
> 2) Given different coal types produce different BTUs do you
> consider the price difference in type of coal you use? (For the
> week ending Jan 4 2008 the variability in pricing was $58/ton for
> 12,500 BTU coal from Applachia to $11.60/ton for 8,800 BTU coal
> from Powder River. That is a 5 to 1 pricing difference for type of
> coal.)
Yes all the comparisons where adjusted to take into account the
different BTU's of the coal. IE more or less of a certain coal type
would be burned per hour to produce the ton-miles per hour or engine
hours( in the case of a comparison involving local switching or yard
switching).
> 3) What is the variability in transportation cost for railroads
> located near and far from the mine face?
> 4) How would a 6.2% increase in coal production requirement affect
> the coal price and therefore affect your conclusion? (THis comes
> back to the type of BTU you want.)
> 5) How would successful coal gasification affect the price of coal
> (increased consumption) and oil (reduced consumption)?
I don't have this data.
>
>
> Alex Schust
John R.
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