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And despite a 1990s World Bank study that outlined measures to combat the fires, little has been done to address the problem in either China or India. Prakash and other experts blame bureaucracy, corruption and the sheer overwhelming scale of the problem. “It’s just crazy,” she says.
Mining is not the only human intensifier of the fires. In Indonesia, huge tracts of land once covered by rain forest— and underlain by near-surface coal—is fast being logged, then cleared for agriculture. The preferred method: fire. The practice has ignited perhaps 3,000 coal fires since 1982, destroying houses, schools and mosques. Heavy smoke carpets much of Southeast Asia, blocking out sunlight and causing crop failures as well as reducing visibility and, in at least one case, triggering an oil-tanker collision. The smoke is also implicated in an epidemic of asthma. On a smaller scale, a related phenomenon has occurred in the United States; near Glenwood Springs, Colorado, for example, an old coal mine has burned for the past 100 years. In the summer of 2002, the blaze ignited a forest fire that consumed 12,000 acres and 43 buildings. Putting it out cost $6.5 million. And the mine still burns.
Generations of engineers and geologists have puzzled over how to fight these behemoths. “We’ve learned the hard way— total excavation is usually the only thing,” says Alfred Whitehouse, a geologist with the U.S. Office of Surface Mining (OSM). Last year, when range fires near Gillette, Wyoming, set off 60 blazes in coal outcrops, the federal Bureau of Land Management sent a helicopter to map hot spots, then used heavy equipment to dig out the burning fires. It worked. “Those fires are nasty little rascals. You can’t let ’em go,” says Bud Peyrot, a rancher who has bulldozed a number of hot spots on his place.
But extinguishing relatively small underground fires with bulldozers and backhoes is one thing. Dealing with firebreathing monsters the size of the one in Centralia poses an altogether different magnitude of challenge. Eastern Pennsylvania sits on the world’s greatest deposits of anthracite—shiny, hard, clean-burning, high-BTU coal in deep beds, squeezed and twisted by the formation of ridges like the one that rises behind John Lokitis’ house. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, miners reached the anthracite deposits through mazes of tunnels, shafts and gangways. If a fire got started in them, miners were usually able to extinguish it before it spread. Then oil and gas replaced anthracite as premier home heating fuels. By the 1950s, most Pennsylvania anthracite mines had been abandoned. Entrances caved in; tunnels began to fill with rubble. Later, strip miners with modern equipment came at the coal from the surface, but they could never reach it all. The result was a landscape of stony debris on top of leftover underground coal laced by interconnected airways—a perfect setting for a coal fire.
The Centralia fire probably got going in May 1962, when local sanitation workers began burning trash at a site over an old mine entrance just outside town, igniting the underlying coal. Over some 20 years, firefighters tried eight times to put it out. First they dug trenches, but the fire outpaced them. Then they attempted “flushing”—a process that involves augering holes into or ahead of a fire, and pouring down wet sand, gravel, slurries of cement and fly ash to cut off oxygen. (Flushing nearly always fails because of the difficulty of filling every pore space. In addition, because coal fires can exceed 1,000 degrees F, most fill material burns away, leaving more gaps. For both of these reasons, the flushing attempt did not succeed.) Next, state and federal geologists drilled hundreds of exploratory boreholes to define the fire, then dug a huge trench across its supposed path. But the fire had already spread beyond the trench. Some critics believe the digging helped ventilate the fire.
Flooding the area with water was rejected: it is nearly impossible to inundate a large underground area, especially one as complex and well drained as Centralia. In any case, water would have had to be pumped in for years to dissipate the fire’s heat. Afinal solution, to dig a pit three-quarters of a mile long and deep as a 45-story building, would have cost $660 million, more than the value of property in town. It, too, was rejected.
Within a few months, the Centralia fire, which began on the town’s outskirts, had spread to its southern edge. At first, this development seemed more curious than calamitous. Kathy Gadinski, then 25, recalls harvesting tomatoes at Christmas from her naturally heated garden. Some folks no longer had to shovel snow. Then things took an ominous turn: residents began passing out in their houses—from carbon monoxide leaking in through their basements. Next, the underground gas tanks at Coddington’s Esso gas station, near St. Ignatius Church, started heating up. Route 61, the main road into town, dropped eight feet, and steam spurted out of cracks in the pavement. Then, in 1981, 12-year-old Todd Domboski was crossing through a resident’s backyard when a hole opened: he slid out of sight into a dense cloud of gases. The boy saved himself by clinging to a tree root until a cousin pulled him out. After that, just about everyone in Centralia accepted the most radical solution of all: let the mine burn. Most residents took the federal buyout and moved to neighboring towns; more than 600 buildings were demolished. “Putting it out is the impossible dream,” says Jones.
In 1992, the town’s remaining buildings were condemned; the state took title to Centralia. Lokitis and other die-hards became squatters, but authorities have not evicted anyone. Most of those who have chosen to remain are elderly, and “that would be very bad publicity,” says Lamar Mervine, Centralia’s flinty, 89-year-old mayor. “They don’t want another Waco here.” (That, he adds, was a joke.) It’s just that he and his wife, Lanna, also 89, like Centralia, even without many neighbors. With much of the demolition zone grassy and still visibly unaffected, they doubt the fire will reach their 15-foot-wide house, now splendidly isolated at 411 South Troutwine Street.


Comments
The question is? How much of these burning coal pits are affecting the greenhouse gas problem
Posted by TERRY AND KATHY SULLIVAN on December 29,2007 | 08:16PM
The owner of the company I work for was talking to me today and mentioned the affect of underground coal fires. I was aware of such a thing but had no idea that they were on such a large scale and generally ignored while we are told to turn down our thermostats. What a waste. Surely there is something that can be done to at least bring some of these unattended hell pits brought under control.
Posted by Bob T.Ritter on January 10,2008 | 06:20PM
Very interesting article. I find these coal fires very interesting and part of nature. It might not be the nature you like to see, but it's nature none the less. Yes, the particular Centralia fire was caused by man, but man is as much nature as anything else, regardless that some humans think that they are something else.
Posted by Rich on April 26,2008 | 07:41PM
Well you learn something new everyday! I hadn't heard of all this until now. I was born in PA and my mother had never heard of Centralia. Too bad there aren't less costly solutions.
Posted by Paula on September 4,2008 | 09:54AM
Last year my company injected more than seven hundred million gallons of nitrogen enhanced foam into a coal mine fire in Virginia, the mine is back into full production now and we are proposing to apply this coal soaking technology to extinguish the historical mine fires such as the Centralia fire. We will capture the CO2 being emitted from the fire and mix it into the foam to be reinjected back into the mine as a suppressant gas and to keep it permanantly sequestered below ground. Somehow we MUST stop these homeland tragedies and put an end to this wasteful pollution and destruction of a valuable energy source. We will need all the public support we can get to convince the regulators that this must be done as soon as posible. Please voice your opinion. CAFSCO Joshua Texas
Posted by Mark Cummins on September 6,2008 | 11:12AM
They should be investing in at least creating some usable energy from these fires. Who knows, with some good thinking mines, perhaps, this reserve can be tapped and contained for our purposes?
Posted by Mario A. Cepeda on November 15,2008 | 10:50PM
The people who still reside in Centralia amaze me. As I drove home from work Thanksgiving night, I was treated to some genuine Christmas Spirit. The "main intersection" in Centralia is decorated beautifully for the holiday. A lighted ornament hangs from a pole at each of the four corners and a lifesize Nativity Scene is sitting on a vacant lot by the roadside. St. Ignatius Cemetary is a few yards away, as is the smoke rising from the fissures.
Posted by Denise Powers on December 1,2008 | 03:38PM
The comments about the Nitrogen-enhanced foam as a fire suppressant are very interesting. Are there further details of this posted somewhere? What was the approximate cost?
Posted by Brad on December 8,2008 | 12:13PM
We should use it for energy. We should create steam generators off of the heat and provide free electricity.
Posted by Kimberly j Brown on February 18,2009 | 01:36PM
About eight years ago I was hired to extinguish a mine fire in Utah. From this call came a new invention called the "Hellfighter". This was the first time a mine fire was extinguished using a method of mixing water, a foam concentrate and injecting Nitrogen into the stream. "The fire is out after only 24 hours, your 800-595-3626 hotline was a Godsend" was quoted by the Mine Manager. This is the first time this has ever happened. Since that time we have been contracted to extinguish every new mine fire in the USA. To date we have had a 100 percent success rate. No failures. One of the reasons this system works is the ability to effectively mix the three components prior to injection into the mine. Others have tried to inject compressed air into the stream. This only "Fans the Fire". Nitrogen suffocates the fire while the water and foam "Quench and Cool the coal and fire. We have now been hired to work on a long ignored coal seam fire in PA. There is a lot of work out there. www.hellfighter.us check it out.
Posted by Alden Ozment on March 2,2009 | 12:16PM
You can thank John Lokitis for decorating Centalia. It is his time and money that makes Centralia still beautiful today. Not only does he decorate for the holidays but he also keeps up with the groundwork and maintenence in the town. All of this is done at his own expense. Now that is loyalty. My hats off to you John. Don't give up the fight.
Posted by Jim on June 4,2009 | 11:08AM
I plan to be in Centralia this October. I would like to get in touch with John Lokitis to see if there is anything my husband and I could help him with for a day or two. My husband is a carpenter, I can rake leaves, paint, etc. Cannot do heavy lifting because i am 63 and small. Rev. Stephanie
Posted by Rev. Stephanie Torkilson-Bambina on September 15,2009 | 02:12PM
I have been unable to reach John Lokitis Jr. even though I wrote to him at his workplace. Anyway, I will visit Centralia one day next week and I plan to decorate the town with hearts of love. Rev. Stephanie Torkilson-Bambina
Posted by Stephanie Torkilson-Bambina on October 11,2009 | 08:37AM