Coal-Fired Power Generation Handbook. James G. Speight

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delivery is used extensively for small power plants in the eastern United States.

      Coal can be moved by truck over regular highways in vehicles with 15 to 30 tons capacity. Coal can also be transported by large off-road trucks with capacities ranging from 100 to 200 net tons. These trucks are almost always diesel-powered with back or bottom dump.

      Specially constructed roads for coal hauling are extensively used for mine-mouth power plants in the west, south, and east, while the hauling of coal by trucks on highways is more concentrated at surface mines. Truck hauls on public highways in the United States typically range from approximately 50 to 75 miles while off-road hauls are approximately 5 to 20 miles.

      Trucks are the most versatile of all transportation modes for coal hauling because they can operate over the widest areas where roads are available.

      However, adverse environmental impacts resulting from truck coal hauling are coal dust particle releases during coal loading or unloading, and coal dust entrainment during transport. Some coal will escape from the trucks during transport because the loads are normally uncovered. The coal dust tends to wash off roadways during rainstorms, causing aesthetic unsightliness and contamination of runoff waters. The air pollutant emissions from diesel fuel combustion add to the emissions.

      3.8.5 Ocean

      Ships are commonly used for international transportation, in sizes ranging from (i) handy size vessel, which is approximately 40,000 to 45,000 dead weight tons, DWT, a term normally taken to mean a vessel of approximately 10,000 to 40,000 DWT, (ii) a panamax-size vessel, which is approximately 60,000 to 80,000 DWT; technically, the maximum size vessel that can pass through the Panama Canal is restricted to a 105-foot beam, and (iii) a cape-size vessel which is capable of carrying >80,000 DWT; this is a vessel that is too large to transit the Panama Canal and thus has to sail via Cape of Good Hope from Pacific to Atlantic, and vice versa.

      However, the ability of coal to variously self-heat (spontaneous ignition), emit flammable gases, corrode, and deplete oxygen levels has made the ocean transport of this commodity a particularly hazardous exercise. This is particularly the case in situations where loading is staggered or delayed and the potentially disastrous consequences of a shipboard coal fire can be realized.

      3.8.6 Conveyer Belt

      Conveyor belts are normally used in mine-mouth power plants to bring coal from the mining area to the storage or usage area. Conveyor belts can be used for coal transport in hilly terrain where roads are relatively inaccessible, typically being used to move coal over distances of 5 miles to 15 miles.

      Conveyors have the advantage of being relatively maintenance free but have the disadvantage of location inflexibility, making a truck haul still necessary. Movable conveyor belts have been developed and used. The only adverse environmental impacts of conveyor belts for coal transport are coal dust losses during loading, unloading, or transport.

      Conveyor belts do not use water, except for belt cleaning; they can use plant electricity and do not require crude oil as the energy source. However, conveyor belts tend to be very energy-intensive. As a result, conveyor belt transport of coal has been limited to shorter distances.

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