CONSOL Energy Announces Sale of High-Vol Coking Coal from Bailey Mine to China
11 January 2010 - 11:30PM
PR Newswire (US)
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 11 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- CONSOL Energy Inc.
(NYSE: CNX), a producer of metallurgical coal, high-Btu thermal
coal, and natural gas, has concluded the first sale of high-vol
coking coal from its Bailey Mine in Northern Appalachia destined
for Asia. The sale was made by Xcoal, as the result of an Asian
Marketing Initiative announced last month by CONSOL. The sale is
for a Panamax vessel of approximately 82,000 short tons. The cargo
is destined for merchant coke plants in the Tianjin/Guafeng area of
China. "CONSOL Energy is enthused that Xcoal was able to quickly
validate the concept of marketing our Northern Appalachian coal to
coke plants in Asia," commented J. Brett Harvey, president and
chief executive officer. "We have a lot more optionality with
regard to our Northern Appalachian coal because of this initiative.
While we're not disclosing specific terms, I can tell you that
CONSOL will receive a significant premium for its Bailey Mine coal,
when compared to its local thermal market. I believe that this sale
will immediately establish CONSOL as a premium brand in Asia." As
previously announced, CONSOL Energy is represented exclusively in
Asia by Xcoal at offices in Beijing, Seoul, Tokyo, and Singapore.
The vessel will be loaded at CONSOL's Baltimore Terminal. CONSOL
Energy Inc., a high-Btu bituminous coal and natural gas company, is
a member of the Standard & Poor's 500 Equity Index and the
Fortune 500. It has 12 bituminous coal mining complexes in six
states and reports proven and probable coal reserves of 4.5 billion
tons. It is also a majority owner of CNX Gas Corporation, a leading
Appalachian gas producer, with proved reserves of over 1.4 trillion
cubic feet. Additional information about CONSOL Energy can be found
at its web site: http://www.consolenergy.com/. Forward-Looking
Statements Various statements in this document, including those
that express a belief, expectation, or intention, as well as those
that are not statements of historical fact, are forward-looking
statements (as defined in Section 21E of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995). The forward-looking statements may include projections and
estimates concerning the timing and success of specific projects,
our future production, revenues, income and capital spending. When
we use the words "believe," "intend," "expect," "may," "should,"
"anticipate," "could," "would," "will," "estimate," "plan,"
"predict," "project," or their negatives, or other similar
expressions, the statements which include those words are usually
forward-looking statements. When we describe strategy that involves
risks or uncertainties, we are making forward-looking statements.
The forward-looking statements in this document speak only as of
the date of this document; we disclaim any obligation to update
these statements unless required by securities law, and we caution
you not to rely on them unduly. We have based these forward-looking
statements on our current expectations and assumptions about future
events. While our management considers these expectations and
assumptions to be reasonable, they are inherently subject to
significant business, economic, competitive, regulatory and other
risks, contingencies and uncertainties, most of which are difficult
to predict and many of which are beyond our control. These risks,
uncertainties and contingencies include, but are not limited to:
the deteriorating economic conditions; an extended decline in
prices we receive for our coal and gas affecting our operating
results and cash flows; reliance on customers honoring existing
contracts, extending existing contracts or entering into new
long-term contracts for coal; reliance on major customers; our
inability to collect payments from customers if their
creditworthiness declines; the disruption of rail, barge and other
systems that deliver our coal; a loss of our competitive position
because of the competitive nature of the coal industry and the gas
industry, or a loss of our competitive position because of
overcapacity in these industries impairing our profitability; our
inability to hire qualified people to meet replacement or expansion
needs; coal users switching to other fuels in order to comply with
various environmental standards related to coal combustion; the
inability to produce a sufficient amount of coal to fulfill our
customers' requirements which could result in our customers
initiating claims against us; foreign currency fluctuations could
adversely affect the competitiveness of our coal abroad; the risks
inherent in coal mining being subject to unexpected disruptions,
including geological conditions, equipment failure, timing of
completion of significant construction or repair of equipment,
fires, accidents and weather conditions which could impact
financial results; increases in the price of commodities used in
our mining operations could impact our cost of production;
obtaining, maintaining, and renewing governmental permits and
approvals for our operations; the effects of proposals to regulate
greenhouse gas emissions; the effects of government regulation; the
effects of stringent federal and state employee health and safety
regulations; the effects of mine closing, reclamation and certain
other liabilities; the effects of subsidence from longwall mining
operations on surface structures, water supplies, streams and
surface land; uncertainties in estimating our economically
recoverable coal and gas reserves; the outcomes of various legal
proceedings, which proceedings are more fully described in our
reports filed under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; increased
exposure to employee related long-term liabilities; minimum funding
requirements by the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (the Pension
Act) coupled with the significant investment and plan asset losses
suffered during the current economic decline has exposed us to
making additional required cash contributions to fund the pension
benefit plans which we sponsor and the multi-employer pension
benefit plans in which we participate; lump sum payments made to
retiring salaried employees pursuant to our defined benefit pension
plan; our ability to comply with laws or regulations requiring that
we obtain surety bonds for workers' compensation and other
statutory requirements; acquisitions that we recently have made or
may make in the future including the accuracy of our assessment of
the acquired businesses and their risks, achieving any anticipated
synergies, integrating the acquisitions and unanticipated changes
that could affect assumptions we may have made; the anti-takeover
effects of our rights plan could prevent a change of control; risks
in exploring for and producing gas; new gas development projects
and exploration for gas in areas where we have little or no proven
gas reserves; the disruption of pipeline systems which deliver our
gas; the availability of field services, equipment and personnel
for drilling and producing gas; replacing our natural gas reserves
which if not replaced will cause our gas reserves and gas
production to decline; costs associated with perfecting title for
gas rights in some of our properties; location of a vast majority
of our gas producing properties in three counties in southwestern
Virginia, making us vulnerable to risks associated with having our
gas production concentrated in one area; other persons could have
ownership rights in our advanced gas extraction techniques which
could force us to cease using those techniques or pay royalties;
our ability to acquire water supplies needed for drilling, or our
ability to dispose of water used or removed from strata at a
reasonable cost and within applicable environmental rules; the
coalbeds and other strata from which we produce methane gas
frequently contain impurities that may hamper production; the
enactment of Pennsylvania severance tax on natural gas may impact
results of existing operations and impact the economic viability of
exploiting new gas drilling and production opportunities in
Pennsylvania; our hedging activities may prevent us from benefiting
from price increases and may expose us to other risks; and other
factors discussed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2008 under "Risk Factors," as updated by
any subsequent Form 10-Qs, which are on file at the Securities and
Exchange Commission. DATASOURCE: CONSOL Energy Inc. CONTACT: Dan
Zajdel of CONSOL Energy Inc., +1-724-485-4169 Web Site:
http://www.consolenergy.com/
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