Trojita
Rapid Response Threadmaker
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/29/business/coal-jobs-trump-appalachia.html?_r=1
Appalachia you are fucked and all you did was enable your rich overlords to siphon even more money out while polluting your water.
In Decatur, Ill., far from the coal mines of Appalachia, Caterpillar engineers are working on the future of mining: mammoth haul trucks that drive themselves.
The trucks have no drivers, not even remote operators. Instead, the 850,000-pound vehicles rely on self-driving technology, the latest in an increasingly autonomous line of trucks and drills that are removing some of the human element from digging for coal.
When President Trump moved on Tuesday to dismantle the Obama administration's climate change efforts, he promised it would bring coal-mining jobs back to America. But the jobs he alluded to — hardy miners in mazelike tunnels with picks and shovels — have steadily become vestiges of the past.
All the while, the coal industry has been replacing workers with machines and explosives. Energy and labor specialists say that no one — including Mr. Trump — can bring them all back.
”People think of coal mining as some 1890s, colorful, populous frontier activity, but it's much better to think of it as a high-tech industry with far fewer miners and more engineers and coders," said Mark Muro, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution's Metropolitan Policy Program.
Caterpillar's autonomous trucks are already being used at mines in Western Australia. ”An autonomous truck doesn't need to stop for lunch breaks or shift changes," Caterpillar said in a promotional page on its website. And it is proceeding with semiautonomous drills, including a system that lets one worker control three drills at once.
A shift from underground coal mines to surface mines — which involves opening mountains with controlled explosions, then using automated heavy machinery to mine the coal — has also led to a decline in mining jobs.
In 1980, the industry employed about 242,000 people. By 2015, that figure had plunged 60 percent, to fewer than 100,000, even as coal production edged up 8 percent. Helped by automation, worker productivity more than tripled over the same period, according to data from the federal Energy Information Administration and the Brookings Institution.
And a recent study by the International Institute for Sustainable Development and the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment predicted that automation was likely to replace 40 to 80 percent of workers at mines.
Automation makes mines more ”safe, efficient and productive," said Corrie Scott, a Caterpillar spokeswoman. ”While mines would not need as many drivers, they will need more people who use and understand the latest technology," she said.
”However way you spin it, gas and renewables are going to continue to replace coal," said Nicolas Maennling, senior economics and policy researcher at Columbia University and an author of the automation study.
”And in order to stay competitive, coal will have to increase automation," he said. ”What Mr. Trump does will make little difference."
Appalachia you are fucked and all you did was enable your rich overlords to siphon even more money out while polluting your water.