Coal, once derided as a dirty fuel, is hot, Vanden Brook writes, adding, Demand for coal to fuel power plants is growing as oil and natural gas prices soar. So is demand for miners.
Citing Jim Dean, director of West Virginia Universitys Mining Extension Service, Vanden Brook reported that aging, retiring miners and a growing mining industry will yield around 7,000 new jobs in the next 10 years in West Virginia, while Luke Popovich of the National Mining Association told Vanden Brook some 50,000 miners would need to be hired in the next decade to meet national demand.
Whats more, noted Vanden Brook, mining jobs pay well as the average West Virginia miner made about $64,000 last year, according to Workforce West Virginia more than twice the $31,000 average income for all industries in the state.
The Business & Media Institute has previously reported [2] how the media have skewed reporting towards arguments in favor of heavier regulation and attacking coal [3]mining companies while ignoring the strong safety record of U.S. mining both in historical perspective, and when compared to other coal-producing countries.