Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Industries, #Technology & Engineering, #Law, #Mystery & Detective, #Science, #Energy, #Public Utilities, #General, #Fiction - General, #Power Resources, #Literary Criticism, #Energy Industries, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Fiction, #Non-Classifiable, #Business & Economics, #European
cheerful sense of humor. Coincidentally, Thurston bad followed the same
career route as Nim and now was Nim's opposite number-vice president of
planning-for Public Service Company of Colorado, one of the nation's most
respected producers and distributors of electricity and natural gas.
Thurston also had what Nim lacked-wide practical experience in power
generation by coal.
"How's everything at home?" Nim asked on their way to the airport parking
lot. His old friend had been married happily for eight years or so to a
bubbly English girl named Ursula, whom Nim knew and liked.
"Fine. The same with you, I hope."
"Not really."
Nim hoped he had conveyed, without rudeness, a reluctance to discuss his
own and Ruth's problems. Apparently so, because Thurston made no comment
and went on, "Ursula's looking forward to seeing you. You'll stay with us,
of course."
Nim murmured thanks while they climed into Thurston's car, a Ford Pinto.
His friend, Nim knew, shared his own distaste for cars with wasteful fuel
habits.
Outside it was a bright, dry, sunny day. As they drove toward Denver, the
snowcapped front range of the Rocky Mountains was clear and beautiful to
the west.
A trifle shyly, Thurston remarked, "After all this time it's really good to
have you here, Nim." He added with a smile, "Even if you did just come for
a taste of coal."
"Does it sound crazy, Thurs?"
Nim had explained last night on the telephone his sudden desire to visit a
coal-fired generating plant and the reasoning behind it.
"Who's to say what's crazy and what isn't? Those endless hearings nowadays
are crazy-not the idea of having them, but the way they're run. In Colorado
we're in the same kind of bind you are in California. Nobody wants to let
us build new generation, but five or six years from now when the power cuts
start, we'll be accused of not looking ahead, not planning for a crisis."
"The plants your people want to build-they'd be coal-burning?"
"Damn right! When God set up natural resources he was kind to
.158
Colorado. He loaded this state with coal, the way he handed oil to the
Arabs. And not just any old coal, but good stuff-low in sulfur, clean
burning, most of it near the surface and easily mined. But you know all
that."
Nim nodded because he did know, then said thoughtfully, "There's enough
coal west of the Mississippi to supply this country's energy needs for
three and a half centuries. If we're allowed to use it."
Thurston continued threading the little car through Saturday morning
traffic, which was light. "We'll go directly to our Cherokee plant, north
of the city," be announced. "It's our biggest. Gobbles up coal like a
starving brontosaurus."
"We burn seven and a half thousand tons a day here, give or take a
little." The Cherokee plant superintendent shouted the information at
Nim, doing his best to be heard above the roar of pulverizer mills, fans
and pumps. He was an alert, sandy-haired young man whose surname-
Folger-was stenciled on the red hard bat he wore. Nim had on a white hard
hat labeled "Visitor." Thurston Jones bad brought his own.
They were standing on a steel plate floor near one side of a gargantuan
boiler into which coal-which had just been pulverized to a fine dust-was
being air-blown in enormous quantities. Inside the boiler the coal
ignited instantly and became white hot; part of it was visible through
a glass-enclosed inspection port like a peephole glimpse of hell. This
heat transferred itself to a latticework of boiler tubes containing water
which promptly became high-pressure steam and ripsnorted to a separate
superheater section, emerging at a thousand degrees Fabrenbeit. The
steam, in turn, rotated a turbine generator wbich-along with other
boilers and turbines at Cberokee-supplied almost three quarters of a
million kilowatts to power-hungry Denver and environs.
Only a portion of the boiler's exterior was visible from the enclosed
area where the men were standing; the entire height of the boiler was
equal to fifteen floors of a normal building.
But all around them were the sight and sound and smell and taste of coal.
A fine gravel of black dust was underfoot. Already Nim was conscious of
a grittiness between his teeth and in his nostrils.
"We clean up as often as we can," Superintendent Folger volunteered. "But
coal is dirty."
Thurston added loudly, with a smile, "Messier than oil or hydro. You sure
you want this filthy stuff in California?"
Nim nodded affirmatively, not choosing to pit his voice against the
surrounding roar of blowers and conveyors. Then, changing his mind, he
shouted back, "We'll join the black gang. Don't have any choice."
He was already glad be had come. It was important to acquire a feel-
159
ing about coal, coal as it would relate to Tunipah, for his testimony next
week.
King Coal! Nim had read somewhere recently that "Old King Coal is
striding back toward his throne." It had to be that way, he thought;
there was no alternative. In the last few decades America had turned its
back on coal, which once brought cheap energy, along with growth and
prosperity, when the United States was young. Other forms of powernotably
oil and gas-had supplanted coal because they were cleaner, easier to
handle, readily obtainable and, for a while, cheaper. But not any more!
Despite coal's disadvantages-and nothing would wish those awaythe vast
black deposits underground could still be America's salvation, its last
and most important natural wealth, its ultimate ace in the hole.
He became aware of Thurston motioning, suggesting they move on.
For another hour they explored Cherokee's noisy, coal-dusty intricacy.
A lengthy stop was at the enormous electrostatic dust collectorsrequired
under environmental laws-whose purpose was to remove burned fly ash which
otherwise would belch from smokestacks as a pollutant.
And cathedral-like generator halls with their familiar, deafening roar-
whine were reminders that whatever the base fuel, electricity in Brob-
dingnagian quantities was what this place was all about.
The trio-Nim, Thurston, Folger-emerged at length from the plant interior
into the open-on a high walkway near the building's peak, two hundred
feet above the ground. The walkway, linked to a maze of others beneath
it by steep steel stairways, was actually a metal grating with everything
below immediately visible. Plant workers moving on lower walkways
appeared like flies. At first Nim looked down at his feet and through the
grating nervously; after a few minutes he adjusted. The purpose of open
gratings, young Folger explained, was for winter weather-to allow ice and
snow to fall through.
Even here the all-pervading noise was still around them. Clouds of water
vapor, emerging from the plant's cooling towers and changing direction
in the wind, blew around and across the walkway. One moment Nim would
find himself in a cloud, seemingly isolated, with visibility limited to
a foot or two ahead. Then the water vapor would swirl away, leaving a
view of the suburbs of Denver spread below, with downtown high-rise
buildings in the distance. Though the day was sunny, the wind up here was
cold and biting and Nim shivered. There was a sense of loneliness, he
thought, of isolation and of danger.
"There's the promised land," Thurston said. "If you have your way, it's
what you'll see at Tunipab." He was pointing to an area, directly ahead,
of about fifteen acres. Covering it completely was a gigantic coal -ile.
" You're looking at four months' supply for the plant, not far from a
million tons," Folger informed them.
16o
"And underneath it all is what used to be a lovely meadow," Tburston
added. "Now it's an ugly eyesore; no one can dispute that. But we need
it. Tbere's the rub."
While they watched, a diesel locomotive on a rail spur jockeyed a long
train of freight cars delivering still more coal. Each car, without
uncoupling, moved into a rotary dumper which then inverted, letting the
coal fall out onto heavy grates. Beneath were conveyors which carried the
coal toward the power plant.
"Never stops," Thurston said. "Never."
There would be strong objections, Nim already knew, to transferring this
scene to the unspoiled wilderness of Tunipah. In a simplistic way he
shared the objectors' point of view. But be told himself: Electric power
to be generated at Tunipah was essential; therefore the intrusion must
be tolerated.
They moved from the high viewing point, descended one of the outside
metal stairways to a slightly lower level, and paused again. Now they
were more sheltered and the force of the wind had lessened. But the
surrounding nosie was greater.
"Something else you'll find when you work with coal," the plant su-
perintendent was saying, "is that you'll have more personnel accidents
than you will with oil or gas or, for that matter, nuclear energy. We've
got a good accident prevention program here. just the same .
Nim wasn't listening.
Incredibly, with only the kind of coincidence which real life-not fie-
tion-can produce, an accident was happening while he watched.
Some fifty feet ahead of Nim, and behind the backs of the other two who
were facing him, a coal conveyor belt was in operation. Tbe belt, a
combination of pliant rubber and steel running over cylindrical rollers,
carried coal to crushers which reduced it to small pieces. Later still
it would be pulverized to a fine powder, ready for instant burning. Now,
a portion of the conveyor belt, because of some large coal lumps, was
blocked and overflowing. The belt continued moving. New coal was pouring
over the side as it arrived. Above the moving belt, a solitary workman,
perched precariously on an overhead grating, was probing with a steel
rod, attempting to clear the blockage.
Later, Nim would learn the procedure was prohibited. Safety regulations
required that the conveyor belt be shut down before a blockage was
cleared. But plant workers, conscious of the need to maintain coal flow,
sometimes ignored the regulation.
Within one or two seconds, while Nim watched, the workman slipped,
checked himself by grabbing the edge of the grating, slipped again, and
fell onto the belt below. Nim saw the man's mouth open as he cried out,
but the sound was lost. He bad fallen heavily; clearly, he was hurt. The
belt was already carrying him higher, nearer the point where the coal
crushing machinery, housed in a box-like structure, would cut him to
pieces.
161
No one else was in sight. No one, other than Nim, had seen the accident
happen.
All he had time for was to leap forward, run, and shout as he went, "Stop
the belt!"
As Nim dived between them, Thurston and Folger, not knowing what was
happening, spun around. They took in the scene quickly, reacted fast, and
raced after Nim. But by the time they moved he was well ahead.