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International Coal Group

International Coal Group, Inc. (ICG), is a company headquartered in Teays Valley, West Virginia that was incorporated in May 2004 by WL Ross & Co for the sole purpose of acquiring certain assets of Horizon.[1] ICG eventually operated 12 mining complexes in Northern and Central Appalachia (Kentucky, Maryland, and West Virginia) and one complex in the Illinois Basin. In November 2005, ICG had a stock offering on the New York Stock Exchange.[2] In 2011 ICG became a subsidiary of Arch Coal, Inc in 2011.

International Coal Group, Inc.
Company typePublic
NYSE: ICO
IndustryCoal mining
FoundedAcquisition of many assets of Horizon Natural Resources at bankruptcy auction (May 2004)
HeadquartersTeays Valley, West Virginia, United States
Key people
Wilbur L. Ross, Jr., Chairman
Bennett K. Hatfield, President/CEO
ProductsCoal
Revenue$647.7 million U.S dollars (2005)
Number of employees
1,425 (2004)
Websitewww.intlcoal.com (Now redirects to Arch Coal's website)

History edit

Wilbur Ross's WL Ross & Co and other investors established the International Coal Group, Inc. (ICG) in May 2004 with the intention of purchasing distressed coal companies, then restructuring them to operate more competitively.[3]

In August 2004 Wilbur Ross's Newcoal LLC and Oldcoal LLC, in partnership with A.T. Massey Coal Company[4] acquired the assets of the bankrupt Horizon Natural Resources, the fourth largest coal company in the United States.[5] for $786 million. On August 9, 2004, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge William Howard ruled that Ross, would "not have to honor union contracts that guaranteed benefits for 1,000 active miners and some 2,300 retirees." The United Mine Workers of America staged a protest in response. Newcoal LLC was only interested in acquiring Horizon's nonunion properties.[5]

When the International Coal Group, Inc. acquired the assets of Horizon Natural Resources it changed its name to ICG, Inc. in September 2004.[1]

In a letter to shareholders ICG Chairman Ross, announced that ICG had agreed to acquire Anker Coal Group, Inc. and CoalQuest Development LLC with the transaction being carried out through a holding company reorganization. Through the reorganization the "existing International Coal Group, Inc." changed its name to "ICG, Inc." A new company called "International Coal Group, Inc." will be the holding company for ICG, Anker and CoalQuest. Shareholders who have shares of the "old International Coal Group" created in 2004 will receive shares of International Coal Group, Inc., the new holding company created in 2005 in a "one-for-one tax-free exchange". The directors and officers of old International Coal Group will become the directors and officers of International Coal Group, Inc., the new holding company.[1]

On June 15, 2011, Arch Coal acquired International Coal Group through a merger for $3.4 billion. ICG became a wholly owned subsidiary of Arch Coal. Coal prices were rising as demand for coal from China and India were increasing. The merged company is the second-largest coking-coal producer in the United States.[6]

By 2006, W.L. Ross & Co. owned 13.7% of the ICG shares which were then valued at about $200 million.[2]

Sago Mine disaster edit

ICG operates the mine in Sago, West Virginia where at approximately 6:30 a.m. on January 2, 2006, 13 coal miners were trapped after an explosion in the Sago Mine disaster. Twelve miners were later found to have died, while one survivor, Randal McCloy Jr., was taken to a hospital in critical condition. ICG faced controversy after an initial report claimed 12 of the trapped miners had been found alive. According to an article in the Wall Street Journal ICG gave an initial donation of $2 million to support the families of the victims.[2] According to a January 27, 2008 article in the Pittsburgh Post, McCloy Jr. and the family of one of the victims settled lawsuits against ICG. The lawsuits "alleged negligence by ICG and the other companies, including alleged failure to maintain a safe working environment."[7]

In 2005, the mine was cited by the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) 208 times for violating regulations, up from 68 in 2004. Of those, 96 were considered significant/serious and substantial (S&S).[8] According to a January 4, 2006 article in the New York Times, federal records showed that their inspectors had fined the Sago mine "more than $24,000 for roughly 202 violations in 2005".[9] Anindya Mohinta, a London-based mining analyst with J.P. Morgan, questioned Ross for investing so heavily in the coal industry "because of myriad government safety and environmental regulations" the coal industry "requires so much capital investment to improve bankrupt assets." Mohinta said that the "human risks of investing in businesses like coal mines have an "act of God" component and it is risky for new companies in the sector to know where and when to spend money for maintenance and prevention."[2]

In late November of early December 2005, ICG acquired Anker West Virginia Mining Company Inc who had been the official mine operator of Sago Mine. The official Sago Mine operator became Wolf Run Mining Company in late 2005. Wolf Run Mining Company was a subsidiary of Hunter Ridge Mining Company, which in turn was a subsidiary of the parent company ICG according to Vice President Sam Kitts in his testimony before the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) hearing on March 23, 2006.[10] Kitts identified Ben Hatfield as his supervisor during the period of transition from Anker to ICG.[10] ICG was in the process of acquiring Anker in November 2005.[1]

Clean Water Act edit

In 2010 Appalachian Voices and the Waterkeeper Alliance alleged they found false pollution reports by ICG and Frasure Creek disguising thousands of CWA violations. They alleged the companies deliberately cut and pasted data from one report to subsequent reports.

— Richmond Register 2012

In 2012 four groups including the Waterkeeper Alliance and Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, Appalachian Voices, Kentucky Riverkeeper and three private citizens won an historic settlement in the Franklin Circuit Court with the Energy and Environment Cabinet and ICG that "addresses water pollution and false reporting by the International Coal Group".[11][12] The lawsuit revealed a lack of state oversight, inaccurate water monitoring reports, and noncompliance with the Clean Water Act in the coal industry in Kentucky. In late 2010 as reports of the violations were revealed, the state of Kentucky clamped down on ICG. With accurate reporting in place, water pollution violations by ICG were revealed. The proposed settlement of $575,000 that ICG has agreed to pay includes a fine of $225,000.[12] The settlement includes third-party auditing of ICG's water monitoring.[12] The money "will be used to monitor and clean up polluted waterways in eastern Kentucky."[11] ICG will pay $335,000 to Kentucky PRIDE to use toward eliminating residential "straight pipes" dumping sewage into streams."[11]

Bennett K. Hatfield edit

Ben Hatfield was President and CEO of ICG in 2006. Hatfield had management positions at Arch Coal, Massey Energy and until his resignation in 2015, he was president and CEO of Patriot Coal. Patriot filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the month following Hatfield's resignation. He was also a member of the West Virginia Coal Association board.[13] In May 2016 59-year-old Bennett K. Hatfield was shot and killed by twenty-year-old Anthony R. Arriaga of Gibsanburg, Ohio in what appeared to be a bungled robbery attempt.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "International Coal Group, Inc". Prospectus Filing. Ashland, Kentucky. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). November 18, 2005. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d Glader, Paul (January 21, 2006). "Mining Disaster Poses a New Test: Wilbur Ross Investor Vows to Continue Push into Coal despite Industry Risk: The 'Act of God' Component". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  3. ^ Gelsi, Steve (April 28, 2005). "International Coal Group files IPO". Market Watch. New York. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  4. ^ "Horizon Natural Resources Auction". Business Wire. August 2017. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Shetty, Raksha (August 9, 2004). "Coal Miners Lose Health Benefits". AP. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  6. ^ Parker, Mario; Clark, Aaron (May 2, 2011). "Arch to Acquire International Coal for Steelmaking Assets". Bloomberg. Retrieved November 7, 2017. Arch Coal Inc.'s $3.4 billion acquisition of International Coal Group Inc. will make it the second-largest U.S. coking-coal producer at a time when prices are soaring amid demand from China and India.
  7. ^ "Survivor and 1 victim's family settle Sago mine lawsuits against the mine's owner". Pittsburgh Post. Charleston, West Virginia. February 27, 2008. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  8. ^ Dao, James (January 4, 2006). "12 Miners Found Alive 41 Hours After Explosion". New York Times. Sago, West Virginia. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  9. ^ a b (PDF). March 23, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 24, 2006. Retrieved November 7, 2017. As of August 26, 2015 Anker West Virginia Mining Company Inc was listed as the official business name of the operator. Chuck Dunbar was the general manager and Johnny Stemple, was one of the safety managers, Ty Coleman was in the command center as a ICG representative. Kitts suggested that he thought the "explosion occurred as a result of a lightning strike igniting methane in the 21 sealed area." He cited the March 15, 2005 ICG press release on page 14, which stated that there was a lightning strike, a detected seismic event, and the alarm of the mine CO-monitoring 3 system went off with all three events happening within the space of roughly one 5 seconds.
  10. ^ a b c Ellis, Ronnie (October 6, 2012). "Environmental groups: ICG Coal settlement 'historic'". Richmond Register via CNHI News Service. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c "Successful fight for clean water". The Lexington Herald Leader. October 9, 2012. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  12. ^ a b Raby, John (May 24, 2016). "Suspect arrested in death of coal executive Bennett Hatfield". Pittsburgh Post. Charleston, West Virginia. Retrieved November 7, 2017.

External links edit

  • International Official 'International Coal Group website

international, coal, group, company, headquartered, teays, valley, west, virginia, that, incorporated, 2004, ross, sole, purpose, acquiring, certain, assets, horizon, eventually, operated, mining, complexes, northern, central, appalachia, kentucky, maryland, w. International Coal Group Inc ICG is a company headquartered in Teays Valley West Virginia that was incorporated in May 2004 by WL Ross amp Co for the sole purpose of acquiring certain assets of Horizon 1 ICG eventually operated 12 mining complexes in Northern and Central Appalachia Kentucky Maryland and West Virginia and one complex in the Illinois Basin In November 2005 ICG had a stock offering on the New York Stock Exchange 2 In 2011 ICG became a subsidiary of Arch Coal Inc in 2011 International Coal Group Inc Company typePublicTraded asNYSE ICOIndustryCoal miningFoundedAcquisition of many assets of Horizon Natural Resources at bankruptcy auction May 2004 HeadquartersTeays Valley West Virginia United StatesKey peopleWilbur L Ross Jr ChairmanBennett K Hatfield President CEOProductsCoalRevenue 647 7 million U S dollars 2005 Number of employees1 425 2004 Websitewww intlcoal com Now redirects to Arch Coal s website Contents 1 History 2 Sago Mine disaster 3 Clean Water Act 4 Bennett K Hatfield 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editWilbur Ross s WL Ross amp Co and other investors established the International Coal Group Inc ICG in May 2004 with the intention of purchasing distressed coal companies then restructuring them to operate more competitively 3 In August 2004 Wilbur Ross s Newcoal LLC and Oldcoal LLC in partnership with A T Massey Coal Company 4 acquired the assets of the bankrupt Horizon Natural Resources the fourth largest coal company in the United States 5 for 786 million On August 9 2004 U S Bankruptcy Judge William Howard ruled that Ross would not have to honor union contracts that guaranteed benefits for 1 000 active miners and some 2 300 retirees The United Mine Workers of America staged a protest in response Newcoal LLC was only interested in acquiring Horizon s nonunion properties 5 When the International Coal Group Inc acquired the assets of Horizon Natural Resources it changed its name to ICG Inc in September 2004 1 In a letter to shareholders ICG Chairman Ross announced that ICG had agreed to acquire Anker Coal Group Inc and CoalQuest Development LLC with the transaction being carried out through a holding company reorganization Through the reorganization the existing International Coal Group Inc changed its name to ICG Inc A new company called International Coal Group Inc will be the holding company for ICG Anker and CoalQuest Shareholders who have shares of the old International Coal Group created in 2004 will receive shares of International Coal Group Inc the new holding company created in 2005 in a one for one tax free exchange The directors and officers of old International Coal Group will become the directors and officers of International Coal Group Inc the new holding company 1 On June 15 2011 Arch Coal acquired International Coal Group through a merger for 3 4 billion ICG became a wholly owned subsidiary of Arch Coal Coal prices were rising as demand for coal from China and India were increasing The merged company is the second largest coking coal producer in the United States 6 By 2006 W L Ross amp Co owned 13 7 of the ICG shares which were then valued at about 200 million 2 Sago Mine disaster editICG operates the mine in Sago West Virginia where at approximately 6 30 a m on January 2 2006 13 coal miners were trapped after an explosion in the Sago Mine disaster Twelve miners were later found to have died while one survivor Randal McCloy Jr was taken to a hospital in critical condition ICG faced controversy after an initial report claimed 12 of the trapped miners had been found alive According to an article in the Wall Street Journal ICG gave an initial donation of 2 million to support the families of the victims 2 According to a January 27 2008 article in the Pittsburgh Post McCloy Jr and the family of one of the victims settled lawsuits against ICG The lawsuits alleged negligence by ICG and the other companies including alleged failure to maintain a safe working environment 7 In 2005 the mine was cited by the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration MSHA 208 times for violating regulations up from 68 in 2004 Of those 96 were considered significant serious and substantial S amp S 8 According to a January 4 2006 article in the New York Times federal records showed that their inspectors had fined the Sago mine more than 24 000 for roughly 202 violations in 2005 9 Anindya Mohinta a London based mining analyst with J P Morgan questioned Ross for investing so heavily in the coal industry because of myriad government safety and environmental regulations the coal industry requires so much capital investment to improve bankrupt assets Mohinta said that the human risks of investing in businesses like coal mines have an act of God component and it is risky for new companies in the sector to know where and when to spend money for maintenance and prevention 2 In late November of early December 2005 ICG acquired Anker West Virginia Mining Company Inc who had been the official mine operator of Sago Mine The official Sago Mine operator became Wolf Run Mining Company in late 2005 Wolf Run Mining Company was a subsidiary of Hunter Ridge Mining Company which in turn was a subsidiary of the parent company ICG according to Vice President Sam Kitts in his testimony before the Mine Safety and Health Administration MSHA hearing on March 23 2006 10 Kitts identified Ben Hatfield as his supervisor during the period of transition from Anker to ICG 10 ICG was in the process of acquiring Anker in November 2005 1 Clean Water Act editIn 2010 Appalachian Voices and the Waterkeeper Alliance alleged they found false pollution reports by ICG and Frasure Creek disguising thousands of CWA violations They alleged the companies deliberately cut and pasted data from one report to subsequent reports Richmond Register 2012 In 2012 four groups including the Waterkeeper Alliance and Kentuckians for the Commonwealth Appalachian Voices Kentucky Riverkeeper and three private citizens won an historic settlement in the Franklin Circuit Court with the Energy and Environment Cabinet and ICG that addresses water pollution and false reporting by the International Coal Group 11 12 The lawsuit revealed a lack of state oversight inaccurate water monitoring reports and noncompliance with the Clean Water Act in the coal industry in Kentucky In late 2010 as reports of the violations were revealed the state of Kentucky clamped down on ICG With accurate reporting in place water pollution violations by ICG were revealed The proposed settlement of 575 000 that ICG has agreed to pay includes a fine of 225 000 12 The settlement includes third party auditing of ICG s water monitoring 12 The money will be used to monitor and clean up polluted waterways in eastern Kentucky 11 ICG will pay 335 000 to Kentucky PRIDE to use toward eliminating residential straight pipes dumping sewage into streams 11 Bennett K Hatfield editSee also Sago Mine disaster Ben Hatfield was President and CEO of ICG in 2006 Hatfield had management positions at Arch Coal Massey Energy and until his resignation in 2015 he was president and CEO of Patriot Coal Patriot filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the month following Hatfield s resignation He was also a member of the West Virginia Coal Association board 13 In May 2016 59 year old Bennett K Hatfield was shot and killed by twenty year old Anthony R Arriaga of Gibsanburg Ohio in what appeared to be a bungled robbery attempt 13 See also editArch CoalReferences edit a b c d International Coal Group Inc Prospectus Filing Ashland Kentucky U S Securities and Exchange Commission SEC November 18 2005 Retrieved November 7 2017 a b c d Glader Paul January 21 2006 Mining Disaster Poses a New Test Wilbur Ross Investor Vows to Continue Push into Coal despite Industry Risk The Act of God Component The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 7 2017 Gelsi Steve April 28 2005 International Coal Group files IPO Market Watch New York Retrieved November 7 2017 Horizon Natural Resources Auction Business Wire August 2017 Retrieved November 7 2017 a b Shetty Raksha August 9 2004 Coal Miners Lose Health Benefits AP Retrieved November 7 2017 Parker Mario Clark Aaron May 2 2011 Arch to Acquire International Coal for Steelmaking Assets Bloomberg Retrieved November 7 2017 Arch Coal Inc s 3 4 billion acquisition of International Coal Group Inc will make it the second largest U S coking coal producer at a time when prices are soaring amid demand from China and India Survivor and 1 victim s family settle Sago mine lawsuits against the mine s owner Pittsburgh Post Charleston West Virginia February 27 2008 Retrieved November 7 2017 Legal Identity Report PDF Report January 4 2006 Retrieved November 7 2017 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a Unknown parameter agency ignored help Dao James January 4 2006 12 Miners Found Alive 41 Hours After Explosion New York Times Sago West Virginia Retrieved November 7 2017 a b Statement under oath of Samuel Kitts PDF March 23 2006 Archived from the original PDF on July 24 2006 Retrieved November 7 2017 As of August 26 2015 Anker West Virginia Mining Company Inc was listed as the official business name of the operator Chuck Dunbar was the general manager and Johnny Stemple was one of the safety managers Ty Coleman was in the command center as a ICG representative Kitts suggested that he thought the explosion occurred as a result of a lightning strike igniting methane in the 21 sealed area He cited the March 15 2005 ICG press release on page 14 which stated that there was a lightning strike a detected seismic event and the alarm of the mine CO monitoring 3 system went off with all three events happening within the space of roughly one 5 seconds a b c Ellis Ronnie October 6 2012 Environmental groups ICG Coal settlement historic Richmond Register via CNHI News Service Retrieved November 7 2017 a b c Successful fight for clean water The Lexington Herald Leader October 9 2012 Retrieved November 7 2017 a b Raby John May 24 2016 Suspect arrested in death of coal executive Bennett Hatfield Pittsburgh Post Charleston West Virginia Retrieved November 7 2017 External links editInternational Official International Coal Group website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Coal Group amp oldid 1194082618, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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