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pdfAppendix B
Summary of Comments on Forms and Instructions
Received in Response to
Federal Register Notice (72 FR 40290)
Published July 24, 2007
Introduction
The Energy Information Administration (EIA) received 21 sets of comments from
interested parties in response to the Federal Register notice 72 FR 40290 published on
July 24, 2007 (See Table B1). The comments addressed proposed changes to the coal
forms/surveys, instructions, and the collection of data elements. The EIA responses to
the comments are found below. Copies of the comments received in reply to the notice
are available in the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Public Reading Room located in
Room 1E-190 at 1000 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, DC 20585.
Many interested parties offered comments that result in changes to the proposed forms.
Some of the comments were editorial in nature, while others result in substantive changes
to the instructions and/or the structure of the forms. The editorial comments are not listed
below, but were addressed appropriately in the forms and/or their instructions. In many
cases, the comments are either summarized below or representative comments are
presented in this Appendix by the EIA.
General Comments
Comment: It was requested that standard fields in the new versions of the forms be
populated with the same information currently found in the existing forms so that the
respondents will not have to re-enter all of the information.
Response: EIA agrees with the comment. EIA will populate new forms with previously
received contact information.
Comment: The EIA was advised to enforce its jurisdictional authority to impose fines on
non-reporting entities in order to bolster the completeness and effectiveness of survey
data.
Response: In such cases where EIA deems it necessary, it will pursue civil action
pursuant to section 13(b) of the Federal Energy Administration Act, as amended, grants
EIA the authority to pursue financial sanctions against non-reporting entities.
Comment: The EIA was advised to form a “user advisory group” that could meet on a
regular basis and be charged with providing continuous guidance to the administration
and “assist it in keeping current with user needs and the evolution of practices in the
industry.”
Coal Program Package – January 2008
B-1
Response: EIA prefers not to form a user advisory group because the logistical effort and
cost of meeting periodically with a user advisory group requires resources that EIA
cannot spare given its other reporting responsibilities. EIA instead prefers to meet on an
ad hoc basis with interested users such as the National Mining Association, industry
consultants, and state geological survey office staff in order to solicit feedback. EIA does
carefully consider comments and suggestions provided by its users and survey
respondents.
Comments on Sensitive Data
Comment: Numerous commenters expressed concern about EIA’s intention to release
certain economic data nine months after the aggregate data is published in the appropriate
report. Specifically, commenters felt that making the economic data available to the
public would reveal sensitive and proprietary cost and production data to competitors.
Additionally, one commenter expressed concern that if EIA were to publish the economic
data as planned, it would lead to discontinued participation by producers and thus
compromise the effectiveness/completeness of the surveys.
Response: EIA has decided not to change its currently existing disclosure policy
regarding sensitive economic data.
Comments on Form EIA-3
Comment: Clarification is needed on who is required to fill out Schedule G relating to
gasified coal manufacturing. Specifically, it was pointed out that the instructions to the
schedule do not adequately specify whether respondents that manufacture gasified coal
used internally in the manufacturing of chemicals must fill out the schedule since the
gasified coal is not manufactured for energy purposes.
Response: EIA agrees with the comment. The instructions for Schedule G have been
changed to clarify who is required to file. They specifically state that facilities which
gasify coal to create non-energy input streams for their own internal processes do not
have to complete Schedule G.
Comment: One respondent asked for clarification on whether coal preparation plants that
only clean raw coal qualify as one of the options presented in Section I. D – Plant Type
(i.e. Manufacturing Plant, Commercial Plant, Institutional Plant or Coal Transformation /
Processing plant).
Response: The Form EIA-3 is a coal consumption and quality report. Thus, there are no
coal preparation plants in the survey frame, and no further need for additional
clarification as to who should file a report. However, the individual who asked for
clarification was responded to directly.
Coal Program Package – January 2008
B-2
Comment: It was suggested that the Distribution Section be shortened to reduce the
amount of work for the respondent.
Response: The distribution data elements collected on the Form EIA-3 have been
reviewed, and they require minimal work, time, and effort. They place no additional
burden upon the respondent.
Comments on Form EIA-8A
Comment: It was requested that, in order to avoid confusion, the definition of “Pit
Inventory” be changed from “Coal in place which has been surveyed or prepared for
mining” to “Coal in place which has been surveyed or prepared for mining and/or
processing”.
Response: The EIA does not accept the proposed change to the definition of Pit
Inventory to include coal surveyed or prepared for processing. Coal surveyed or prepared
for processing ordinarily has been mined. This coal should not be considered as part of
pit inventory.
Comment: It was suggested that it may be redundant to ask for beginning of year
information and end of year information.
Response: EIA agrees with the comment. EIA pre-populates the beginning-of-year stock
field with data provided by the respondent for the previous period. The respondent does
not need to enter the beginning-of-year data. The form then asks for ending stock levels
and allows for an adjustment to be made in case the beginning stock level was adjusted
by the respondent due to processing gains or losses. New respondents, of course, would
be required to enter beginning-of-year stocks the first time they file Form EIA-8A.
Comments on Form EIA-7A
Comment: One respondent expressed concern over double reporting of prepared waste
coal. Specifically, the respondent explained that waste coal obtained from surface mines
and resized may be counted twice since it is being reported by both the surface mine and
the preparation plant. The respondent suggested that waste coal plants only report
material that they both mine and size as opposed to material they only prepare.
Response: Waste coal which is processed by preparation plants from surface mines and
resized is not counted twice because only surface mines report the production data
relating to the coal. The preparation plants only report labor hours relating to the
processing of the waste coal. Moreover, EIA does not actually collect any coal
production data but reports data collected by MSHA. In MSHA’s survey, it instructs coal
producers to only report clean coal production and not waste coal.
Coal Program Package – January 2008
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Comments on Form EIA-6A
Comment: It was suggested that eliminating the EIA-6A survey would lead to poorer
quality of data and diminished utility to market participants because the consolidation of
forms reduces the number of available data sources and thus the ability to analyze and
compare alternative information.
Response: The EIA has concluded that the proposed alternative (capturing data from
electric surveys) will maintain data quality and significantly reduce the burden on current
respondents. It is anticipated that during the 2007 survey cycle, the EIA will compare the
data from EIA-6A respondents to the replacement and new source data. Efforts will focus
on identifying and resolving any differences exhibited to maintain the quality, utility and
clarity of the data to support public policy analysis of the coal industry.
Coal Program Package – January 2008
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Table B1. Commenters Responding to the Federal Register Notice of July 24, 2007
Number
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Commenter
Austin White Lime Company
Dominion Clearinghouse
East River Coal Company
Eastman Chemical Company
General/Unknown Company Name
Hiller Group
Logan & Kanawha Coal Co.
Luminant
Martin Marietta Magnesia Specialities LLC
Mississippi Lime
National Lime Association
National Mining Association
Palmer Management Corporation
Peabody Energy Corp.
Piney Creek LP
Platts
Sequoia Energy LLC
TECO Coal Corporation
TransAlta Centralia Mining LLC
TXU Portfolio Management
Western Lime Corporation
Coal Program Package – January 2008
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File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | Appendix A |
Author | vdo |
File Modified | 2008-02-05 |
File Created | 2008-02-05 |