PurposeThis study’s aim was to understand the effect of mine characteristics on cradle-to-gate life cycle impacts of surface coal mining in the USA. Five bituminous coal strip mines were used as case studies. The study assessed the life cycle water use, land use, energy use, abiotic resource depletion, and climate change impacts.MethodsThe study employed the general principles of the ISO 14040-49 series LCA standards, modifying them where necessary. The functional unit was defined as “one tonne of processed coal at the mine gate.” The relative mass–energy–economic value method, with some modification, was used to scope the product system. Data were obtained from environmental impact statements, coal mining permit applications, government reports, and published literature. Life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) included classification and characterization but no normalization, grouping, or weighting, to avoid ambiguity. In this work, mid-point characterization models were preferred over damage-oriented (end-point) characterization models because of their high levels of uncertainties. The LCIA also included sensitivity analysis.Results and discussionFor the studied mines, life cycle potential water use impact is 178 l/tonne of processed coal at the mine gate. The potential land use, energy use, abiotic resource depletion, and climate change impacts range from 3 to 10 m2 year/tonne, 97 to 181 MJ/tonne, 7.8 to 9.4 kg Sb-eq./tonne, and 38 to 92 kg CO2-eq./tonne, respectively. Land use impacts depend mainly on land for coal extraction activities and the climatic conditions of a region, which affects the vegetation recovery rate, following reclamation. Economies of scale significantly influence land use, energy use, abiotic resource depletion, and climate change impacts. Geology, which determines stripping ratio, coal quality, and coalbed methane, affects land use, climate change, and energy use impacts, particularly energy for overburden removal, reclamation, and beneficiation.ConclusionsThe data show that large-scale mining operations have lower life cycle impacts due to economies of scale, which results in lower energy use. Also, land use impacts, measured by land occupation, are affected by geologic conditions. This study provides insight into sources of variability in life cycle impacts of coal mining. The authors recommend timely reclamation to minimize land occupation impacts, as well as adoption of large-scale production, where appropriate, for efficient use of land occupied by mine facilities.
[1]
Sandra R. Smith,et al.
Electric power monthly
,
1992
.
[2]
David R. Shonnard,et al.
An evaluation of greenhouse gas mitigation options for coal-fired power plants in the US Great Lakes States
,
2010
.
[3]
Henrikke Baumann,et al.
The hitch hiker's guide to LCA : an orientation in life cycle assessment methodology and application
,
2004
.
[4]
Jan Wachowicz,et al.
A life cycle method for assessment of a colliery’s eco-indicator
,
2004
.
[5]
Alan C. Brent,et al.
Application of a Life Cycle Impact Assessment framework to evaluate and compare environmental performances with economic values of supplied coal products
,
2006
.
[6]
Roydon Andrew Fraser,et al.
The Relative Mass-Energy-Economic (RMEE) Method for System Boundary Selection
,
2000
.
[7]
Roydon Andrew Fraser,et al.
The relative mass-energy-economic (RMEE) method for system boundary selection Part 1: A means to systematically and quantitatively select LCA boundaries
,
2000
.
[8]
D. A. Tolle,et al.
Evaluating Land-Use Impacts: Selection of Surface Area Metrics for Life-Cycle Assessment of Mining
,
2008
.
[9]
Peter Balash,et al.
Greenhouse gas emissions from coal gasification power generation systems
,
2004
.
[10]
M. Huijbregts,et al.
Handbook on Life Cycle Assessment: Operational Guide to the ISO Standards
,
2002
.
[11]
Callie W. Babbitt,et al.
A life cycle inventory of coal used for electricity production in Florida
,
2005
.
[12]
Wilhelm Kuckshinrichs,et al.
Environmental assessment of German electricity generation from coal-fired power plants with amine-based carbon capture
,
2009
.
[13]
Stuart J Day,et al.
Greenhouse gas emissions from Australian open-cut coal mines: contribution from spontaneous combustion and low-temperature oxidation
,
2010,
Environmental monitoring and assessment.
[14]
Seungdo Kim,et al.
Life Cycle Inventory Information of the United States Electricity System (11/17 pp)
,
2005
.
[15]
Shabbir H. Gheewala,et al.
Integrated environmental assessment and pollution prevention in Vietnam: the case of anthracite production
,
2007
.
[16]
A. Tillman,et al.
The hitch hiker's guide to LCA (Life Cycle Assessment): an orientation in Life Cycle Assessment methodology and application
,
2004
.
[17]
H. L. Miller,et al.
Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis
,
2007
.