The '''Cordero Rojo Mine''' is a coal mining complex located in the state of [[Wyoming]] in the United States, in the coal-rich [[Powder River Basin]]. The mine is of open pit mining construction and employs several dragline excavators. Two coal-processing facilities are located on-site, and crushed coal is shipped by rail to electric utility customers in the south and west of the United States.<ref name="MT">{{#display_mapcite web|url=http://www.mining-technology.com/projects/cordero/|title=Cordero Rojo Coal Mine, WY, USA| 44work=mining-technology.11 , com|publisher=SPG Media Limited|accessdate=2009-04-10514}}</ref><ref name="RTEA">{{cite web|url=http://www.rtea.com/pages/corderorojo.36 aspx|widthtitle=600Cordero Rojo Mine|heightwork=350Rio Tinto Energy America website|typepublisher=satelliteRio Tinto Group|zoomaccessdate=2009-04-14}}</ref> The mine employs between 430 and<ref name="MT"/> and 540<ref name="RTEA"/> people.
<googlemap version="0.9.4" zoom="15" lat="{{#display_map:|44.11" lon=",-105.36" type="satellite"></googlemap>The '''Cordero Rojo Mine''' is a coal mining complex located in the state of [[Wyoming]] in the United States, in the coal-rich [[Powder River Basin]]. The mine is of open pit mining construction and employs several dragline excavators. Two coal-processing facilities are located on-site, and crushed coal is shipped by rail to electric utility customers in the south and west of the United States.<ref name="MT">{{cite web|urlwidth=http://www.mining-technology.com/projects/cordero/600|titleheight=Cordero Rojo Coal Mine, WY, USA400|worktype=mining-technology.comsatellite|publisherzoom=SPG Media Limited|accessdate=2009-04-14}}</ref><ref name="RTEA">{{cite web|url=http://www.rtea.com/pages/corderorojo.aspx|title=Cordero Rojo Mine|work=Rio Tinto Energy America website|publisher=Rio Tinto Group|accessdate=2009-04-14}}</ref> The mine employs between 430 and<ref name="MT"/> and 540<ref name="RTEA"/> people.
The mining complex is wholly owned by the giant mining company [[Rio Tinto Group]], thru its subsidiary [[Rio Tinto Energy America]]. It was formed in 1997 from the consolidation of two previously existing mines, the Cordero mine (purchased by Rio Tinto in 1993) and the Caballo Rojo mine (purchased in 1997).<ref name="MT"/> The mine produced between 34 and 36 million tons of coal per year in the years 2004 to 2006,<ref name="MT"/> and over 40 million tons of coal in 2007, making the Cordero Rojo that year's third-highest producer of coal in the United States.<ref name="EIA">{{cite web|url=http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/coal/page/acr/table9.html|title=Major U.S. Coal Mines, 2007|date=September 2008|publisher=[[Energy Information Administration]] of the [[Department of Energy]]|accessdate=2009-04-14}}</ref>