Burma and coal

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Revision as of 12:24, 13 April 2011 by Bob Burton (talk | contribs) (SW: →‎Existing coal mines: add mines)
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{{#badges: Climate change |CoalSwarm}} As of 2011, there is an estimated total coal reserve of more than 270 million tons in Burma, and 16 large scale coal deposite.[1][2] The Department of the Ministry of Energy states, on a webapage that hasn't been updated since approximately 2000, that of the 16 major coal deposits, only the Kalewa coal mine and the Namma coal mines are currently operating.[3]

Existing coal mines

In its 2009 review of mining in Burma, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) reported that 245,418 tonnes of coal were produced in 2009. The USGS listed Kalewa coal mine in Sagaing near Kalewa, with an annual production capacity of 13,000 tonnes, as the only major operating coal mine. The mine is owned and operated by Mining Enterprise No. 3.[4]

In a 2011 report by the Pa’O Youth Organisation reported that Mining Enterprise No. 3 [ME-3] is a state entity under the Ministry of Mining which develops projects in conjunction with domestic and overseas corporations. "The Ministry of Mining reported that in 2011 state-owned enterprises will operate 2.81% of the country’s coal mines, joint venture operations will account for 43.87% and local private companies will operate 53.32%.4 These are spread throughout at least 82 coal mining blocks across the country," the report stated.[1]

The Pa’O Youth Organisation lists additional currently operating coal mines in Burma as being the:[1]

  • Dathwegyauk coal mine near Tamu in Sagain state is based on a deposit estimated to contain 33.9 million tonnes of sub-bituminous coal;
  • Lweje coal mine near Moemauk in Kachin state is operated by ME-3, Ayeyarwaddy Myitpyar and the Bamboo Result Co. Ltd.;
  • Tigyit coal mine near Pinlaung in Shan state is based on a 20 million tonnes lignite deposit and is operated by Shan Yoma Nagar, Eden Group and Shwe Than Lwin;
  • Sam Laung coal mine near Tibaw in Shan state is based on a 1 million tonnes lignite deposit. The mine is operated by AAA Internationl;
  • Maw Taung coal mine near Taninthayi in Taninthayi state is based on a 3.6 million deposit of sub-bituminous coal. The mine is operated by Saraburi and MEC.

Tigyit coal mine

The Tigyit coal mine produces about 2,000 tons of coal daily. The China National Heavy Machinery Corporation initiated the Tigyit project in 2002, about 16 miles from Inle Lake, in partnership with the Burmese companies Eden Group and Shan Yoma Nagar Company. When the project was started, 24 houses in Taung Po La and Likah villages were forcibly relocated by companies and local authorities. A 2011 report by the Pa-O Youth Organisation states that coal production from the mine has produced at least 100 tons of coal ash and coal waste, which is disposed of in a nearby coal-fired thermal power plant. The water flows into the second largest lake in Burma, Inle Lake, an Asean national heritage site. There are about 25 villages within a 5-mile radius of the project, which are home to about 11,592 people. The 2011 report found that the mine has created air and water pollution which has caused about 2,000 nearby residents to report skin diseases.[5]

An article in the Democratic Voice of Burma stated that the China National Heavy Machinery Corporation Company (CHMC) is the main economic thrust behind Burma’s largest open-pit coal mine and coal-fired power plant in Tigyit, and that the 2000 tonnes of lignite coal mined each day is shipped to a nearby cement factory for use in dam construction.[6]

Sagaing Region

In February 2011, three major contracts were signed for the production of tens of thousands of tonnes of coal in Sagaing Region, starting in 2011. Two of the mines will be in Kalewa township, and one in Mawlaik township.[7]

A 600 megawatt coal-fired power plant, part-operated by the China Guodian Corporation, is also under construction in Sagaing division, with the power slated to be sent to Burma’s largest copper mine in nearby Monywa, operated by Chinese weapons manufacturer Norinco. The output from the Monywa mine will go to China, with a statement in 2009 on the Norinco website saying that the deal would “enhance the influence of our country in Myanmar [Burma]”. The article also noted that a similar agreement will also allow China’s Taiyuan Iron and Steel (Group) Company, the largest steel manufacturer in the world, to mine the Sagaing division for nickel.[6]

Coal-fired power stations

Existing coal-fired power stations

Proposed coal-fired power stations

A 2011 report by the Pa’O Youth Organisation reported that proposed coal-fired power stations include the:[1]

  • Kalewa power station, a proposed 600 megawatt power station which has been mooted to be built by China Guodian Corporation and Tun Thwin Mining Co., Ltd. The power is proposed to be sold to the Monywa copper project;
  • Mai Khot power station (also referred to as Mong Kok, is a proposed 369 megawatt power station which has been proposed to be operated by the Thia company, Italian-Thai Development Plc. It is proposed that the power be exported to the Chiang Rai region of northern Thailand;
  • Htantabin power station, is a proposed 200 megawatt proposed 270 MW power station. The proposed operators are the Huaneng Lancangjiang Hydropower Co., Ltd of China and Htoo Trading Co., Ltd. of Burma. It is proposed that the power be supplied to factories in three industrial zones of Rangoon;
  • Dawei power station is a proposed 4-6,000 megawatt power station which has been proposed to be operated by the Thia company, Italian-Thai Development Plc. It has been reported that firms from China, Korea and Japan are also interested. The output from the power station is notionally slated for a major industrial estate that includes a steel mill and petrochemical facilities;
  • Rangoon Division power station, a proposed 1080 megawatt power station. The Pa’O Youth Organisation report states that "plans to develop these plants yet how the power will be used has not been disclosed."
  • Kawthoung power station is a proposed 6 megawatt power station. The Pa’O Youth Organisation report states that "no details available, yet the Thai company Saraburi Coal mines the nearby Maw Taung coal deposit."

Thailand to build coal plant in Burma

According to 2011 conceptual plans of the Italian-Thai Development Public Company Ltd., which has been given a 60-year construction grant by the Burmese junta to establish a deep-sea port and industrial estates in Tavoy, Thailand will build a 4,000 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant—the largest in Southeast Asia—on the Maungmagan beach in Burma. The electricity generated by the power plant, which will be 100 percent owned by Thailand, will be used both for export to Thailand and to supply the electricity demand of new industrial estates in Tavoy.[8]

Citzens groups campaigning on coal mining

Articles and Resources

Related SourceWatch articles

References

  1. Jump up to: 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Pa’O Youth Organisation, Poison Clouds: Lessons from Burma’s largest coal project at Tigyit, Pa’O Youth Organisation, January 2011. (Pdf)
  2. Kyaw Kha, "2,000 people report skin diseases from Tigyit coal mine" Mizima, Jan. 21, 2011.
  3. Department of the Ministry of Energy, "coal Sub-sector", Department of the Ministry of Energy website, accessed April 2011.
  4. Yolanda Fong-Sam, The Mineral Industry of Burma: 2009, U.S. Geological Survey, Department of the Interior, April 2011. (Pdf)
  5. Kyaw Kha, "2,000 people report skin diseases from Tigyit coal mine" Mizima, Jan. 21, 2011.
  6. Jump up to: 6.0 6.1 Francis Wade, "Shouldering China’s toxic burden" Democratic Voice of Burma, March 23, 2011.
  7. Juliet Shwe Gaung, "Sagaing coal deals inked" Myanmar Times, Jan. 31, 2011.
  8. "Thailand to Build Coal-Fired Power Plant in Burma" Thailand Construction News, March 3, 2011.

External resources