SURVEY OF BROWN COAL MINING AND PROCESSING IN GERMANY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
R
Document Page Count: 
13
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 21, 2011
Sequence Number: 
281
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 26, 1953
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7.pdf841.92 KB
Body: 
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 CLASSIFIChii~i~f,CL y~~JR~IyFCUT3_r p~~ CENTRALS itJT~LLIutfVGERhu[N~C~Y INFORMATION FROM FOREIGN DOCUMENTS OR RAUW BROADCASTS REPORT cD Ne. DATE OF COUNTRY Germany SUBJECT Economic - Mining industry, brown coal HOW PUBLISHED Month~.y periodical WHERE PUBLISHED Duesseldorf DATE PUBLISHED Jan 1952 LANGUAGE Gercan re .[ DxYrtD {rn[{~{. nx~x .?[vunxa olYn nc F?. ucn o?{IY .x Drr o T.l Y. COOL. ? II x010. ?.? Y?{{I Y? Ox .[YI' L.TID?+DI Ili [Dx r[.i{ r0 D? .l[[I.r LT ?x{DY1Yr?Dxl)[D .I.{Dx I[ DATE DIST. ~( Jan 1953 N0. OF PAGES 13 SUPPLEh1ENT TO REPORT NO. THIS IS UNEVALUATED INFORMATION Braunkohle, Waerme and Energie, Vol IV, No 1-2, 1952. SURVEY OF BROWN COAL LflNING AND PROCESSING IN GERMANY Heinrich Eirz Dr ?of Engr Cologne LTables referred to are appended ThP development of brown coal mining i.n the past 50 year-s has been charac- terized main7;? by steady grovth. Up to the turn of the century, brown coal mining was a ama;.l induetry, as opposed to the already greatly developed indus- try of bituminous mining. At the beginning of the century, the sitti:tion changed, as a result of the increased demand for brown coal pra:ucts and, consequently, in their heightened market valve. New regions were opener in increasing numbers, and in various axeas, existing works were enlarged and modernized. Esuecially during the period since the end cf t,7er13 War I, .there began, along with the in-_ creasing demand for etude brown coal and brown ecal briquettes, a unique and irregular development of brown coal technology, net only in respect to the pro- ductiot, of brown coal in open-pit mines but also in respect to its use. Because of insuf~icient dr17'ings, the estimates of brown coal reserves have been incomplete and often have been increae?d after the opening of new fields. Even today, it !s still impossible to secure a. clear picture of the reserves in exiatenee. 1~#imates of the reserves exist for 1901, 192^c, and 1935. In 1901, tY.e reserves of brc.ru coal were estimateA, at i0 billion tons. The estimate for 1922 gave the total as 22 billion tons, of which 10 billion tons were available from open-pit mines and 12 billion toss from underground mining. Even these STATE ARMY NAW AIR CLASSIFICATION RESTRICTED NSRB FBI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 reserre estimates were yell under the actual figures, as indicated by the sta- tistics submitted by the Prussian Geological Institute, which completed an inventory of the German reserves of brow coal 1n winter 1934 and spring 1935. According to these figures, the known and probable reserves extractable at that time amounted to about 57 billion tons, after deducting for mining losses (10 percent in. open-pit mines and 40 percent in underground mining) and quantities lost thx?ough local conditions sad transport. OP these, about 18 billion tons xere reported as extractable through open- pit mines and about 39 billion tone through underground mining. These reserves were distributed ae follow; Approximately 17.7 billion tons, or 31.3 percent, in the Rhineland; 16.4 billion tone, or 28.8 percent, in the Lusatian provlncen 8.4 billion to e, or 14.8 percent, in the Hagdaburg_galls-Leipzig region; sad tone, or 8.2 Percent, in East Germahy. The balance of 4.9 billion Saxony, Hease,~and gav~~aPPortioned among the remaining districts of Lover These estiuates yet also be considered outdated because of the drillings vhich Nava since Seen carried out and the modern open-pit mining techniques which alloy reserves aov to be xorked as open-pit mines which in 1935 still had to be considered underground. This applies especially to the brow coal area in the Rhineland. According to more recent information, the available reserves in this region can be estimated to be at least 25 billion tone, but because of insufficient drillings, a conclusive estimate of the reserves is still not poaeibla. On the basis of the fact that it is non possible to employ open-pit mining up to as absolute depth of 200 meters (through both rook cover and coal seams), according to the corresponding thickness of the deposits, the estimate of the reserves available through open-pit m?.ning in the Rhineland district itt 1935 can be increased from 2.3 billion tone to 4.6 billion tone. by analogy, the eeMmates of open-pit reserves and, because of lover mining losses is open-pit workings, the estimates of the total reserves in the other brow coal mining districts have increased. can be~esured by the production in '.950, the supply from the brow coal mines xpected to last from 300 to 350 years. II. DEVELOPk7EERT OF :'RODUCTIOR The center cf brow coal production hsa been and still is in t;~e region surrounding the zits River and in the Rhineland. Except for slight variations, brown coal production i.ncreaeed steadily until 1943. From about 15 millicn tone in 1885, it rose to about 40 million tone in 1900, 86 million tone in 1913 (see Table 1) sad reached, through almost unin- terrupted increase, 174 million tens in 1929; by 1932, it sank to about 123 million tons, but Inter began to rise again, and during the war-- computed in the 1937 boundaries __reached 253.4 million tons in 1943, the highest point ever attained. OP the output in 1943, 80 millicn tuns were produced in the present Federal Republic, In the last year of the war, ly(~4~ production sank to about 230 millicn tone, and in 1945, it dropped to about .111 million tone, its lowest point since 1920. After the effects of the var were overcome,, the output again rose to about 176 million tone in 1948 an3 about 2ij million tons ~ 195G (+,he production figures of the Soviet Zoae since 1945 are merely con- ~ecture); this exceeded the production in 1938 by about 18 millicn tons. For Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 FtESTRI?7'ED 1951, an increase in output to about 221 million tons is expected. The share of the Federal RePubli^- in the total 1950 production was 75.8 million tone, ~ 1951, this share rose to about 83.1 million tone. 5ltuminous coal production far surpassed brown coal production until 1921; the situation changed after 1922, Except for s period from 1925 to 1927, brown coal production took the lead and has retained it until the present time, ductioa cametf~ oopen pitam nee and aboutt700percenttfrom/under~ coal pro- The portion of the output from open-pit mines had already risen ~~out~70 g. percent shortly before World War I, aad in 1943, only 5 percent still came from underground mining, while 95 percent came from oper.-pit mines. Today, the portion Pram underground mining is probably even smaller. The increase in the amount ?of brown coal produced from open-pit mines was togetherswith a strong con ntrationmofheperat onsla!g~-scale production methods, mining of the deposits With almost no lone. ~ ncreased productivity, and The number of workers and office employees engaged in brown coal mining rose from 73,300 in 1914 to 109,200 in 1926, yell to 98,400 by 1938, and in- crease. by 1943 to about 129,000 because of war requirements. In 1950, the number oP employees was about 158,000. Of this number, about 121,000 were in the Soviet Zone and about 37,000 in the Federal Republic., At the beginning of the century, open-pii mining, ao against underground mining was considered economically feasible, if, for a deposit from 10 to 20 meters thick, the ratio of the rock covering to the coal we.e not morn than 1 to 1? Thanks to the devel~paant of minin6 ter_hnology, this :-atio has constantly improved, Shortly before World War I, aad until its end, the economical mi-,ing of brown Coal in open pits was et ill iirci.ted in deposits of tae above-mentioned thickness to a ratio of covering rock to coal of ? to 1. To3sy, by excava!irg awl using railroad care for hauling, it is possible to op=rate at a ratio Prom 5 and 6 to ]. end by using conveying bridges when the rock covering and structure of the seams ia.favorablc at a ratio from 7 aad 8 to 1 and higher. At the end of the war, an open-pit mine was being opened at Fuerstenberg (0~?er), where deposits from 9 tc 10 meters thick are covered by o0 meters of rook. It wan to be mined by using excavators o:~ tracks, Aa a matter of .fact, at ti.m4s, open- oft minirg operation- have Seen carried o:~t profitably in Lauer Lusatia xith a ratio of rock covering to coal of 8 to i at deposits from 10 to 12 maters. Ia open-pit mining of bro:,n coal, the thickness of the uepoeit naturally plays an important part, as does the a:.iual depth. In other words, a brown coal deposit 20 meters thick can still 'be worked pro^itabJ.y by open-pit mining filth a ratio oP rock to coal of 6 to 1, or 120 meters of ec-rering rock to 20 meters of coal. Thereby, the actual depth of the open pit is 140 meters. Tbis is already the case at s fEw instalistion3 in central Germany, If, however, a seam is, for exemple, 5o rasters think, then the open-pit mina, according to a ratio of rock to coal of 5 tc 1, would reach a depth. of 300 meters. Despite great progrees, open-pit min Leg techn~iogy has ::ot advanced far enough to make coal mining at such depths profitable at the present-day prices of crude coal and briquettes. However, the solution of this problem is of the greatest importance for the mining of deep-lying coal, especially in the Rhineland District. Rere, nex open-pit pro,jecta and mine^ which are at present being opened are t:o ba mined with deposits from 50 to 80 meters thick and a rook covering of 120 meters and 1o7rr_, -J- RFSIFtI;.f'ED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/10/25: CIA-RDP80-00809A000700100281-7 ?~_.x.r. ~~.,; It is to. be hoped and expected that open-pit mining technology x111 further develop so that the deposits xhich are still regarded as confined to underground mining xith its high mining looses, con be worked by open-pit mining. Where the limits of profitableness betxeen open-pit and underground mining x111 eventually lie cannot conclusively be state3 nox, since it x111 vary a5 to location and x311 depend on a variety of factors, especially on the pri^_e of the broxn coal Products. In accordance xith open-pit production and the incressed amount of rock covering one ton of coal, the dross rock to be moved has also increased steadily, In 1923 (the figures for previous years are not available), dross removal already totaled 170 million cubic meters; in 1929, it vsa 244 million cubic meters; in 193$, ?25 million cubic meters; and in 1943, the year of the greatest output, the production from open_pit mines of about 242 million tuns required dross re- moval of Sit million cubic meters. Of that, 473 million cubic meters xere in the central German region. Thus, xith an outavt from open_pit mines there of et most 172 million tons, an average of 2,$ cubic meters of dross per ton of coal produced required removal. In the Rhineland region, the ratio at that time xas considerably more favorable is th1., respect and has remained so until the present. With an open-pit production of 68.6 million Lone in 19!+3, the dross removal amounted to about 40 million ~:ubic meters, xhich is equal to about .5$ cubic meters per ton of coal produced. From the above figures, it: i~ obvious that in og=n-pit mining the primary problem concerns the extraction sad haulage of the dross, xhich in the central German regions accounted for 70 percent of the total mining costa, However in the Rhineland region also, the ratio of covering rock to coal in new open- pit mines rill increase considerably in the future as compared to the present, so that here, too, dross removal x111 4e the main element of operations. creasedeeffScienoveorfa~oecsodemoval~s?hehamoiicrittopbthetdios~removal the in- shift (including worksho p personnel and `he like _ Per ~n (for the Rhineland District, there are ro relati,eifituresenira~ German districts cubic metsrs and increased suarply ton peak of 66.8 ~ b1^_)matere inxls F1 j0 Therea~cer, the output of dross per mansnlft decreased 9~ to about 61 c:ubtc meters; in the next 3 again4 in 1p39, was doves meters; and in 1 4 ;,'ears, it remained a, about 59 cubic 9 3, because oP the wa??, it sank to almost 47 cubic meters. The improvement of operations in *,he open-pit mining of broxn coal after Wi .d War Z con beat be ~ea~ized by cersiderirg the iuczease in output per man shift. I^ the open-p!t mines of the "ormer Deutsche Bratiakohlen-Industrle- oerein e. V., with which all the broxn _ual cumpani