Saturday, August 22, 2020 10:25:05 AM
1. Lowering carrier insurance premiums by eliminating complaints of land and water contamination from transit.
2. Eliminating widespread court appearances from groups like Sierra Club and Earth Justice who mainly just tie-up judicial benches using coal dust as the argument, giving states such as WA a reason to deny land and water use permits.
3. Saving taxpayers hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars in court litigation costs nationwide.
4. A cleaner and heathier environment and lifestyle
By removing water from coal means:
1. Reducing weight of product being shipped-lowering shipping costs
to buyers.
2. Lowering costs for railroad by lowering fuel consumption to haul it-saving energy.
3. Eliminating risk of self-combustion also lowering the high risk factor for insurance companies.
CCTI's technology could be considered more of a requirement than an option.
Millennium Bulk in Longview WA has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in legal litigation fees for a water permit to build a transfer station.
The monkey wrench in the case was coal dust from transport.
I can see why the DOE and EPA would be interested. CCTI has the key to the kingdom.
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