U.S. Coal Reserves |
2005 U.S. Demonstrated Coal Reserve Base
(millions of tons)
The U.S. Demonstrated Coal Reserve Base is an estimate of the tonnage of economically available coal.** |
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Coal Producing |
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Total** |
Appalachian Region |
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Alabama |
3,158.77 |
1,083.00 |
4,241.77 |
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Georgia |
3.60 |
3.60 |
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Kentucky, Eastern |
10,671.35 |
10,671.35 |
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Maryland |
651.51 |
651.51 |
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North Carolina |
10.70 |
10.70 |
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Ohio |
23,342.49 |
23,342.49 |
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Pennsylvania |
7,200.47 |
20,396.73 |
27,597.20 |
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Tennessee |
779.26 |
779.26 |
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Virginia |
125.49 |
1,614.23 |
1,739.72 |
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West Virginia |
33,220.10 |
33,220.10 |
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Appalachian Total |
7,325.96 |
93,848.74 |
1,083.00 |
102,257.70 |
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Interior Region |
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Arkansas |
104.00 |
287.40 |
25.37 |
416.77 |
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Illinois |
104,528.89 |
104,528.89 |
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Indiana |
9,534.47 |
9,534.47 |
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Iowa |
2,189.45 |
2,189.45 |
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Kansas |
972.56 |
972.56 |
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Kentucky, Western |
19,553.67 |
19,553.67 |
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Louisiana |
426.71 |
426.71 |
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Michigan |
127.70 |
127.70 |
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Missouri |
5,989.93 |
5,989.93 |
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Oklahoma |
1,556.83 |
1,556.83 |
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Texas |
12,442.36 |
12,442.36 |
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Interior Total |
104.00 |
144,740.90 |
12,894.44 |
157,739.34 |
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Western Region | |||||
Alaska |
697.51 |
5,400.36 |
14.00 |
6,111.87 |
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Arizona |
6.67 |
6.67 |
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Colorado |
25.50 |
8,330.08 |
3,747.27 |
4,189.86 |
16,292.71 |
Idaho |
4.42 |
4.42 |
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Montana |
1,385.38 |
102,138.45 |
15,756.52 |
119,280.35 |
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New Mexico |
2.30 |
3,598.65 |
8,571.28 |
12,172.22 |
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North Dakota |
9,090.13 |
9,090.13 |
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Oregon |
17.45 |
17.45 |
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South Dakota |
366.10 |
366.10 |
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Utah |
5,443.76 |
1.10 |
5,444.86 |
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Washington |
303.71 |
1,028.94 |
8.07 |
1,340.72 |
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Wyoming |
4,318.15 |
60,006.97 |
64,325.12 |
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Western Total |
27.80 |
24,088.33 |
180,911.82 |
29,424.68 |
234,452.64 |
U.S. Total |
7,457.76 |
262,677.97 |
180,911.82 |
43,402.12 |
494,449.67 |
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East of the Mississippi |
236,002.42 |
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West of the Mississippi |
258,447.25 |
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**Kentucky coal resource values are considered by some to be too high, while the Eastern Kentucky "Demonstrated Coal Reserve Base" value is still openly rejected by many as being too low. Source: U.S. DOE - EIA, U.S. Coal Reserves: 2005 Update (January 2005) |
Eastern
Kentucky Low-Sulfur Coal
The U.S. DOE estimates that over 32.3% of Eastern Kentucky’s Demonstrated Reserve Base (DRB) would meet a 0.6 pounds of sulfur dioxide per million Btu emissions limit (low sulfur), and that 45.9% would meet a 1.67 lb/mm Btu emissions limit (medium sulfur). |
Summary Sulfur Content Categories*
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NOTE: Change
% sulfur to Sulfur Dioxide Emission Category (lb SO2 / mmBtu)
comparisons. *EIA uses 6 sulfur content ranges. For general discussion and summary data, however, those 6 ranges are combined into 3 qualitative ratings of low, medium, and high-sulfur content. |