A soft, brownish-black coal in which the alteration of vegetable matter has proceeded further than in peat but not as far as in bituminous coal. Also called brown coal.
lignitic lig·nit'ic (-nĭt'ĭk) adj.
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A soft, brownish-black coal in which the alteration of vegetable matter has proceeded further than in peat but not as far as in bituminous coal. Also called brown coal.
lignitic lig·nit'ic (-nĭt'ĭk) adj.A brown to black combustible rock that originated by accumulation and subsequent physical and chemical alteration of plant material over long periods of time, and that on a moisture-free basis contains no more than 50% mineral matter. The plant debris accumulated in various wet environments, commonly called peat swamps, where dead plants were largely protected from decay by a high water table and oxygen-deficient water. The accumulating spongy, water-saturated, plant-derived organic material known as peat is the precursor of coal. Over time, many changes of the original vegetable matter are brought about by bacteria, fungi, and chemical agents. The process progressively transforms peat into lignite or brown coal, subbituminous coal, bituminous coal, and anthracite. This progression is known as the coalification series. The pressure exerted by the weight of the overlying sediment and the heat that increases with depth, as well as the length of exposure to them, determine the degree of coalification reached. See also Fossil fuel; Kerogen; Lignite; Peat.
Minable coal seams occur in many different shapes and compositions. Some coal seams can be traced over tens, even hundreds, of miles in relatively uniform thickness and structure. The extensively mined Herrin coal bed of the Illinois Basin and the Pittsburgh coal bed of the northern Appalachian Basin are examples. They are 6–8 ft (2–2.5 m) thick over thousands of square miles. These coals originated in peat swamps that developed on vast coastal plains during the Pennsylvanian Period. The German brown coal deposits near Cologne are characterized by very thick coal deposits (300 ft or 100 m). However, their lateral extent is much more limited than are the two examples from the United States. These peat deposits formed in a gradually subsiding structural graben bounded by major faults. Land lay to the south and the sea to the north. Only a relatively small portion of the subsiding graben block provided optimal conditions for peat accumulation over a long period of time. Thus each coal bed has its own depositional history that determined many of its characteristics. See also Carboniferous; Cretaceous; Pennsylvanian.
Coal seams are commonly composed of a number of benches of alternating coal and more or less carbonaceous shale. The shale represents periods when the peat accumulation was interrupted by flooding from a river or the sea, or, more rarely, interrupted by volcanic ash deposition (tonsteins). The individual benches of a coal bed vary laterally in thickness and composition, sometimes quite rapidly. The degree of variability is related to the stability of conditions during accumulation. Fluvial and lacustrine depositional environments produce greater lateral variability than deltaic or coastal plain environments. See also Shale.
Both physical (pressure, heat) and chemical (biochemical, thermochemical) factors are influential in the transformation of peat into the other members of the coalification series. The boundaries between the members of the series are transitional and must be chosen somewhat arbitrarily. The term rank is used to identify the stage of coalification reached in the course of coal metamorphism. Rank is a fundamental property of coal, and its determination is essential in the characterization of a coal. Classification of coal by rank generally is based upon the chemical composition of the coal's ash-free or mineral-matter-free organic substance, but parameters derived from empirical tests indicative of technological properties, such as agglomerating characteristics, are commonly used in several countries outside the United States in addition to coal rank parameters. See also Metamorphism.
Coal rank increases with depth at differing rates from place to place, depending primarily on the rate of temperature increase with depth (geothermal gradient) at the time of coalification. Coal rank also changes laterally, even in the same coal seam, as former depth of burial and thus exposure to different pressure and temperature vary. Originally established vertical and regional coalification patterns can be significantly altered by various kinds of geologic events, such as the intrusion of large magma bodies at depth (plutonism), or renewed subsidence of a region. Volcanic activity may cause significant local anomalies in coal rank, but rarely leads to regional changes in coalification pattern. See also Magma.
Coal is used primarily for producing steam in electric power plants. Other important uses are by industry for producing steam and heat, and by the steel industry for coke making. Conversion of coal to synthetic liquid or gaseous fuels does not constitute a major use of coal worldwide or in most countries. See also Coal chemicals; Coal gasification.
For more information on lignite, visit Britannica.com.
Coal (IPA: /ˈkəʊl/) is a
As geological processes apply pressure to dead vegetation matter over time, under suitable conditions, it is transformed successively into
The classification of coal is generally based on the content of volatiles. However, the exact classification varies between countries. According to the German classification, coal is classified as follows:[1]
| ... | Volatiles % | C Carbon % | H Hydrogen % | O Oxygen % | S Sulfur % | Heat content kJ/kg |
| Braunkohle (Lignite) | 45-65 | 60-75 | 6.0-5.8 | 34-17 | 0.5-3 | <28470 |
| Flammkohle (Flame coal) | 40-45 | 75-82 | 6.0-5.8 | >9.8 | ~1 | <32870 |
| Gasflammkohle (Gas flame coal) | 35-40 | 82-85 | 5.8-5.6 | 9.8-7.3 | ~1 | <33910 |
| Gaskohle (Gas coal) | 28-35 | 85-87.5 | 5.6-5.0 | 7.3-4.5 | ~1 | <34960 |
| Fettkohle (Fat coal) | 19-28 | 87.5-89.5 | 5.0-4.5 | 4.5-3.2 | ~1 | <35380 |
| Esskohle (Forge coal) | 14-19 | 89.5-90.5 | 4.5-4.0 | 3.2-2.8 | ~1 | 35380 |
| Magerkohle (Non baking coal) | 10-14 | 90.5-91.5 | 4.0-3.75 | 2.8-3.5 | ~1 | <35380 |
| Anthrazit (Anthracite) | 7-12 | >91.5 | <3.75 | <2.5 | ~1 | <35300 |
The middle six grades in the table represent a progressive transition from the English-language sub-bituminous to bituminous coal, while the last class is an approximate equivalent to anthracite, but more inclusive (the U.S. anthracite has < 8% volatiles).
Outcrop coal was used in Britain during the Bronze Age (2-3000 years BC), where it has been detected as forming part of the composition of funeral pyres.[2] It was also commonly used in the early period of the Roman occupation. Evidence of trade in coal (dated to about AD200) has been found at the inland port of Heronbridge, near Chester, and in the Fenlands of East Anglia, where coal from the Midlands was transported via the Car Dyke for use in drying grain.[3] Coal cinders have been found in the hearths of villas and military forts, particularly in Northumberland, dated to around AD400. In the west of England contemporary writers described the wonder of a permanent brazier of coal on the altar of Minerva at Aquae Sulis (modern day Bath) although in fact easily-accessible surface coal from what is now the Somerset coalfield was in common use in quite lowly dwellings locally.[4]
However, there is no evidence that the product was of great importance in Britain before the High Middle Ages, after about AD1000. Mineral coal came to be referred to as "seacoal," probably because it came to many places in eastern England,
including London, by sea. This is accepted as the more likely explanation for the
name than that it was found on beaches, having fallen from the exposed coal seams above or
washed out of underwater coal seam outcrops. These easily accessible sources had largely become exhausted (or could not meet the
growing demand) by the 13th century, when underground mining from shafts or
Coal is primarily used as a solid fuel to produce electricity and heat through combustion. World coal consumption is about 5.3 billion tons annually, of which about 75% is used for the production of electricity. The region including the People's Republic of China and India uses about 1.7 billion tonnes annually, forecast to exceed 2.7 billion tonnes in 2025.[5] The USA consumes about 1.0 billion tons of coal each year, using 90% of it for generation of electricity.
When coal is used for electricity generation, it is usually pulverized and then burned in a furnace with a boiler. The furnace heat converts boiler water to steam, which is then used to spin turbines which turn generators and create electricity. The thermodynamic efficiency of this process has been improved over time. "Standard" steam turbines have topped out with some of the most advanced reaching about 35% thermodynamic efficiency for the entire process, which means 65% of the coal energy is rejected as waste heat into the surrounding environment. Old coal power plants, especially "grandfathered" plants, are significantly less efficient and reject higher levels of waste heat. The emergence of the supercritical turbine concept envisions running a boiler at extremely high temperatures and pressures with projected efficiencies of 46%, with further theorized increases in temperature and pressure perhaps resulting in even higher efficiencies[6] Approximately 40% of the world electricity production uses coal. The total known deposits recoverable by current technologies, including highly polluting, low energy content types of coal (i.e., lignite, bituminous), might be sufficient for 300 years' use at current consumption levels, although maximal production could be reached within decades (see World Coal Reserves, below).
A more energy-efficient way of using coal for electricity production would be via solid-oxide fuel cells or molten-carbonate fuel cells (or any oxygen ion transport based fuel cells that do not discriminate between fuels, as long as they consume oxygen), which would be able to get 60%–85% combined efficiency (direct electricity + waste heat steam turbine). Currently these fuel cell technologies can only process gaseous fuels, and they are also sensitive to sulfur poisoning, issues which would first have to be worked out before large scale commercial success is possible with coal. As far as gaseous fuels go, one idea is pulverized coal in a gas carrier, such as nitrogen. Another option is coal gasification with water, which may lower fuel cell voltage by introducing oxygen to the fuel side of the electrolyte, but may also greatly simplify carbon sequestration.
Coke is a solid carbonaceous residue derived from low-ash, low-sulfur bituminous coal from which the volatile constituents are driven off by baking in an oven without oxygen at temperatures as high as 1,000 °C (1,832 °F) so that the fixed carbon and residual ash are fused together. Metallurgic coke is used as a fuel and as a reducing agent in smelting iron ore in a blast furnace. Coke from coal is grey, hard, and porous and has a heating value of 24.8 million Btu/ton (29.6 MJ/kg). Byproducts of this conversion of coal to coke include coal tar, ammonia, light oils, and "coal gas".
Petroleum coke is the solid residue obtained in oil refining, which resembles coke but contains too many impurities to be useful in metallurgical applications.
High prices of oil and natural gas are leading to increased interest in "BTU Conversion" technologies such as gasification, methanation and liquefaction.
Coal gasification breaks down the coal into its components, usually by subjecting it to high temperature and pressure, using steam and measured amounts of oxygen. This leads to the production of syngas, a mixture mainly consisting of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H2).
In the past, coal was converted to make coal gas, which was piped to customers to burn for illumination, heating, and cooking. At present, the safer natural gas is used instead. South Africa still uses gasification of coal for much of its petrochemical needs.
The Synthetic Fuels Corporation was a U.S. government-funded corporation established in 1980 to create a market for alternatives to imported fossil fuels (such as coal gasification). The corporation was discontinued in 1985.
Gasification is also a possibility for future energy use, as the produced syngas can be cleaned-up relatively easily leading to cleaner burning than burning coal directly (the conventional way). The cleanliness of the cleaned-up syngas is comparable to natural gas enabling to burn it in a more efficient gas turbine rather than in a boiler used to drive a steam turbine. Syngas produced by gasification can be CO-shifted meaning that the combustible CO in the syngas is transferred into carbon dioxide (CO2) using water as a reactant. The CO-shift reaction also produces an amount of combustible hydrogen (H2) equal to the amount of CO converted into CO2. The CO2 concentrations (or rather CO2 partial pressures) obtained by using coal gasification followed by a CO-shift reaction are much higher than in case of direct combustion of coal in air (which is mostly nitrogen). These higher concentrations of carbon dioxide make carbon capture and storage much more economical than it otherwise would be.
Coal can also be converted into liquid fuels like gasoline or diesel by several different processes. The Fischer-Tropsch process of indirect synthesis of liquid hydrocarbons was used in Nazi Germany for many years and is today used by Sasol in South Africa. Coal would be gasified to make syngas (a balanced purified mixture of CO and H2 gas) and the syngas condensed using Fischer-Tropsch catalysts to make light hydrocarbons which are further processed into gasoline and diesel. Syngas can also be converted to methanol, which can be used as a fuel, fuel additive, or further processed into gasoline via the Mobil M-gas process.
A direct liquefaction process Bergius process (liquefaction by hydrogenation) is also available but has not been used outside Germany, where such processes were operated both during World War I and World War II. SASOL in South Africa has experimented with direct hydrogenation. Several other direct liquefaction processes have been developed, among these being the SRC-I and SRC-II (Solvent Refined Coal) processes developed by Gulf Oil and implemented as pilot plants in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s.[7]
Another direct hydrogenation process was explored by the NUS Corporation in 1976 and patented by Wilburn C. Schroeder. The process involved dried, pulverized coal mixed with roughly 1wt% molybdenum catalysis. Hydrogenation occurred by use of high temperature and pressure synthesis gas produced in a separate gasifier. The process ultimately yielded a synthetic crude product, Naptha, a limited amount of C3/C4 gas, light-medium weight liquids (C5-C10) suitable for use as fuels, small amounts of NH3 and significant amounts of CO2.[8]
Yet another process to manufacture liquid hydrocarbons from coal is low temperature carbonization (LTC). Coal is coked at temperatures between 450 and 700°C compared to 800 to 1000°C for metallurgical coke. These temperatures optimize the production of coal tars richer in lighter hydrocarbons than normal coal tar. The coal tar is then further processed into fuels. The Karrick process was developed by Lewis C. Karrick, an oil shale technologist at the U.S. Bureau of Mines in the 1920s.
All of these liquid fuel production methods release carbon dioxide (CO2) in the conversion process, far more than is released in the extraction and refinement of liquid fuel production from petroleum. If these methods were adopted to replace declining petroleum supplies, carbon dioxide emissions would be greatly increased on a global scale. For future liquefaction projects, Carbon dioxide sequestration is proposed to avoid releasing it into the atmosphere, though no pilot projects have confirmed the feasibility of this approach on a wide scale. As CO2 is one of the process streams, sequestration is easier than from flue gases produced in combustion of coal with air, where CO2 is diluted by nitrogen and other gases. Sequestration will, however, add to the cost.
Coal liquefaction is one of the backstop technologies that could potentially limit escalation of oil prices and mitigate the effects of transportation energy shortage[dubious ] that some authors have suggested could occur under peak oil. This is contingent on liquefaction production capacity becoming large enough to satiate the very large and growing demand for petroleum. Estimates of the cost of producing liquid fuels from coal suggest that domestic U.S. production of fuel from coal becomes cost-competitive with oil priced at around 35 USD per barrel,[9] (break-even cost). This price, while above historical averages, is well below current oil prices. This makes coal a viable financial alternative to oil for the time being, although production is not great enough to make synfuels viable on a large scale.[10]
Among commercially mature technologies, advantage for indirect coal liquefaction over direct coal liquefaction are reported by Williams and Larson (2003). Estimates are reported for sites in China where break-even cost for coal liquefaction may be in the range between 25 to 35 USD/barrel of oil.
Coal is the official state mineral of Kentucky and the official state rock of Utah. Both U.S. states have a historic link to coal mining.
Coal mining causes a number of harmful effects. When coal surfaces are exposed, pyrite (iron sulfide), also known as "fool's gold", comes in contact with water and air and forms sulfuric acid. As water drains from the mine, the acid moves into the waterways, and as long as rain falls on the mine tailings the sulfuric acid production continues, whether the mine is still operating or not. This process is known as acid rock drainage (ARD) or acid mine drainage (AMD). If the coal is strip mined, the entire exposed seam leaches sulfuric acid, leaving the infertile subsoil on the surface and begins to pollute streams by acidifying and killing fish, plants, and aquatic animals who are sensitive to drastic pH shifts.
By the late 1930s, it was estimated that American coal mines produced about 2.3 million tonnes of sulfuric acid annually. In the Ohio River Basin, where twelve hundred operating coal mines drained an estimated annual 1.4 million tonnes of sulfuric acid into the waters in the 1960s and thousands of abandoned coal mines leached acid as well. In Pennsylvania alone, mine drainage had blighted 2,000 stream miles by 1967.
Combustion of coal, like any other fossil fuel, occurs due to an exothermic reaction between the components of the fuel source, and the components air surrounding it. Coal is made primarily of carbon, but also contains sulfur, oxygen and hydrogen. Generally, the air consists of hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, along with various other substances. The reaction between coal and the air surrounding it produces oxides of carbon, usually carbon dioxide (CO2) in a complete combustion, along with oxides of sulfur, mainly sulfur dioxide (SO2), and various oxides of nitrogen (NOx). Because of the hydrogen and nitrogen components of air, hydrides and nitrides, of carbon and sulfur, are also produced during the combustion of coal in air. These could include hydrogen cyanide (HCN), sulfur nitrate (SNO3) and many other toxic substances.
Further, acid rain may occur when the sulfur dioxide produced in the combusion of coal, reacts with oxygen to form sulfur trioxide (SO3), which then reacts with water molecules in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid (see Acid anhydride for more information). The sulfuric acid (H2SO4) is returned to the Earth as acid rain. Scrubbing systems, which use lime to remove the sulfur dioxide can reduce or eliminate the likelihood of acid rain.
However, another form of acid rain is due to the carbon dioxide emissions of a coal plant. When released into the atmosphere, the carbon dioxide molecules react with water molecules, to produce carbonic acid (H2CO3). This, in turn, returns to the earth as a corrosive substance. This cannot be prevented as easily as sulfur dioxide emissions can, because carbon is the main component of coal, and this resultantly means that a person cannot as easily reduce carbon dioxide emissions caused in the oxidation of coal, as they can with the afforementioned use of lime to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions.
Emissions from coal-fired power plants represent one of the two largest
sources of carbon dioxide emissions, which is commonly considered the primary cause of global warming. Coal mining and abandoned
mines also emit methane, another purported cause of global warming. Since the carbon content of
coal is higher than oil, burning coal is a serious threat to the stability of the global climate, as this carbon forms
CO2 when burned. Many other pollutants are present in coal power station emissions, as solid coal is more difficult to
clean than oil, which is refined before use. A study commissioned by environmental groups
claims that coal power plant emissions are responsible for tens of thousands of premature deaths annually in the United States
alone.[11] Modern
Coal and coal waste products including fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag, and flue gas desulferization contain many heavy metals, including arsenic, lead, mercury, nickel, vanadium, beryllium, cadmium, barium, chromium, copper, molybdenum, zinc, selenium and radium, which are dangerous if released into the environment. Coal also contains low levels of uranium, thorium, and other naturally-occurring radioactive isotopes whose release into the environment may lead to radioactive contamination.[12][13] While these substances are trace impurities, enough coal is burned that significant amounts of these substances are released, resulting in more radioactive waste than nuclear power plants.[14] Mercury emissions from coal burning are concentrated as they work their way up the food chain and converted into dangerous biological compounds that have made it dangerous to eat fish from many waterways of the world.[15][16]
The energy density of coal, i.e. its heating value, is roughly 24 megajoules per kilogram.[17]
The energy density of coal can also be expressed in kilowatt-hours, the units that electricity is most commonly sold in, to estimate how much coal is required to power electrical appliances. The energy density of coal is 6.67 kW-h/kg and the typical thermodynamic efficiency of coal power plants is about 30%. Of the 6.67 kW-h of energy per kilogram of coal, about 30% of that can successfully be turned into electricity - the rest is waste heat. Coal power plants obtain approximately 2.0 kW-h per kg of burned coal.
As an example, running one 100 watt computer for one year requires 876 kW-h (100 W × 24 h × 365 {days in a year} = 876000 W-h
= 876 kW-h). Converting this power usage into physical coal consumption:
It takes 438 kg (967 pounds) of coal to power a computer for one full year.[18] One should also take into account transmission and distribution losses caused by resistance and heating in the power lines, which is in the order of 5 - 10%, depending on distance from the power station and other factors.
Because coal is at least 50% carbon (by mass), then 1 kg of coal contains at least 0.5 kg of carbon, which is
where 1 mol is equal to NA
(Avogadro Number) particles. This combines with oxygen in the atmosphere during combustion, producing carbon dioxide, with
an atomic weight of (12 + 16 × 2 = mass(CO2) = 44 kg/kmol).
of CO2 is
produced from the
present in every kilogram of coal, which once trapped in CO2 weighs approximately
.
This can be used to put a carbon-cost of energy on the use of coal power. Since the useful energy output of coal is about 30% of the 6.67 kWh/kg(coal), we can say about 2 kWh/kg(coal) of energy is produced. Since 1 kg coal roughly translates as 1.83 kg of CO2, we can say that using electricity from coal produces CO2 at a rate of about 0.915 kg CO2/kWh, or about 0.254 kg CO2/MJ.
This estimate compares favourably with the U.S. Energy Information Agency's 1999 report on CO2 emissions for energy generation[19], which quotes a specific emission rate of 950 g CO2/kWh. By comparison, generation from oil in the U.S. was 890 g CO2/kWh, while natural gas was 600 g CO2/kWh. Estimates for specific emission from nuclear power, hydro, and wind energy vary, but are about 100 times lower. See indirect carbon emissions from nuclear power for estimates.
There are hundreds of coal fires burning around the world.[20] Those burning underground can be difficult to locate and many cannot be extinguished. Fires can cause the ground above to subside, combustion gases are dangerous to life, and breaking out to the surface can initiate surface wildfires. Coal seams can be set on fire by spontaneous combustion or contact with a mine fire or surface fire. A grass fire in a coal area can set dozens of coal seams on fire.[21][22] Coal fires in China burn 109 million tonnes of coal a year, emitting 200 million tonnes of carbon dioxide. This amounts to 2-3% of the annual worldwide production of CO2 from fossil fuels, or as much as emitted from all of the cars and light trucks in the United States.[23][24] In Centralia, Pennsylvania (a borough located in the Coal Region of the United States) an exposed vein of coal ignited in 1962 due to a trash fire in the borough landfill, located in an abandoned anthracite strip mine pit. Attempts to extinguish the fire were unsuccessful, and it continues to burn underground to this day. The Australian Burning Mountain was originally believed to be a volcano, but the smoke and ash comes from a coal fire which may have been burning for over 5,500 years.[25]
At Kuh i Malik in Yagnob Valley, Tajikistan, coal deposits have been burning for thousands of years, creating vast underground labyrinths full of unique minerals, some of them very beautiful. The only way to peek inside and survive for more than a few seconds is by wrapping yourself in a wet blanket. Local people once used this method to mine ammoniac. This place has been well-known since the time of Herodotus, but European geographers mis-interpreted the Ancient Greek descriptions as the evidence of active volcanism in Turkestan (up to the 19th century, when Russian army invaded the area).
The reddish siltstone rock that caps many ridges and buttes in the Powder River Basin (Wyoming), and in western North Dakota is called porcelanite, which also may resemble the coal burning waste "clinker" or volcanic "scoria".[26] Clinker is rock that has been fused by the natural burning of coal. In the Powder River Basin approximately 27 to 54 billion tonnes of coal burned within the past three million years.[27] Wild coal fires in the area were reported by the Lewis and Clark Expedition as well as explorers and settlers in the area.[28]
In 2005, China was the top producer of coal with almost one-third world share followed by the USA and India, reports the British Geological Survey.
In 2003 it was estimated that there was around one exagram (1 × 1015 kg or 998 billion tons) of total coal reserves accessible using current mining technology, approximately half of it being hard coal. The energy value of all the world's recoverable coal is 27 zettajoules,[29] which is expected to last 200 years.[citation needed] At the current global total energy consumption of 15 terawatt,[30] there is enough coal to provide the entire planet with all of its energy for 57 years.
British Petroleum, in its annual report 2007, estimated at 2006 end, there were 909,064 million tons of proven coal reserves worldwide (9.236 × 1014 kg or 0.9236 exagrams), or 147 years reserve to production ratio. This figure only includes reserves classified as "proven", exploration drilling programs by mining companies, particularly in under-explored areas, are continually providing new reserves. In many cases, companies are aware of coal deposits that have not been sufficiently drilled to qualify as "proven". However, some nations haven't updated their information and assume reserves remain at the same levels even with withdrawls.
The United States Department of Energy uses estimates of coal reserves in the region of 1,081,279 million short tons (9.81 × 1014 kg), which is about 4,786 BBOE (billion barrels of oil equivalent).[31] The amount of coal burned during 2001 was calculated as 2.337 GTOE (gigatonnes of oil equivalent), which is about 46 million barrels of oil equivalent per day.[32] Were consumption to continue at that rate those reserves would last about 285 years. As a comparison, natural gas provided 51 million barrels (oil equivalent), and oil 76 million barrels, per day during 2001.
Of the three fossil fuels coal has the most widely distributed reserves; coal is mined in over 100 countries, and on all continents except Antarctica. The largest reserves are found in the USA, Russia, Australia, China, India and South Africa.
Note the table below.
| Country | Bituminous (including anthracite) | Sub- bituminous | Lignite | TOTAL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States of America | 115891 | 101021 | 33082 | 249994 |
| Russian Federation | 49088 | 97472 | 10450 | 157010 |
| People's Republic of China | 62200 | 33700 | 18600 | 114500 |
| India | 82396 | 2000 | 84396 | |
| Australia | 42550 | 1840 | 37700 | 82090 |
| Germany | 23000 | 43000 | 66000 | |
| South Africa | 49520 | 49520 | ||
| Ukraine | 16274 | 15946 | 1933 | 34153 |
| Kazakhstan | 31000 | 3000 | 34000 | |
| Poland | 20300 | 1860 | 22160 | |
| Serbia | 64 | 1460 | 14732 | 16256 |
| Brazil | 11929 | 11929 | ||
| Colombia | 6267 | 381 | 6648 | |
| Canada | 3471 | 871 | 2236 | 6578 |
| Czech Republic | 2114 | 3414 | 150 | 5678 |
| Indonesia | 790 | 1430 | 3150 | 5370 |
| Botswana | 4300 | 4300 | ||
| Uzbekistan | 1000 | 3000 | 4000 | |
| Turkey | 278 | 761 | 2650 | 3689 |
| Greece | 2874 | 2874 | ||
| Bulgaria | 13 | 233 | 2465 | 2711 |
| Pakistan | 2265 | 2265 | ||
| Iran (Islamic Rep.) | 1710 | 1710 | ||
| United Kingdom | 1000 | 500 | 1500 | |
| Romania | 1 | 35 | 1421 | 1457 |
| Thailand | 1268 | 1268 | ||
| Mexico | 860 | 300 | 51 | 1211 |
| Chile | 31 | 1150 | 1181 | |
| Hungary | 80 | 1017 | 1097 | |
| Peru | 960 | 100 | 1060 | |
| Kyrgyzstan | 812 | 812 | ||
| Japan | 773 | 773 | ||
| Spain | 200 | 400 | 60 | 660 |
| Korea (Democratic People's Rep.) | 300 | 300 | 600 | |
| New Zealand | 33 | 206 | 333 | 572 |
| Zimbabwe | 502 | 502 | ||
| Netherlands | 497 | 497 | ||
| Venezuela | 479 | 479 | ||
| Argentina | 430 | 430 | ||
| Philippines | 232 | 100 | 332 | |
| Slovenia | 40 | 235 | 275 | |
| Mozambique | 212 | 212 | ||
| Swaziland | 208 | 208 | ||
| Tanzania | 200 | 200 | ||
| Nigeria | 21 | 169 | 190 | |
| Greenland | 183 | 183 | ||
| Slovakia | 172 | 172 | ||
| Vietnam | 150 | 150 | ||
| Congo (Democratic Rep.) | 88 | 88 | ||
| Korea (Republic) | 78 | 78 | ||
| Niger | 70 | 70 | ||
| Afghanistan | 66 | 66 | ||
| Algeria | 40 | 40 | ||
| Croatia | 6 | 33 | 39 | |
| Portugal | 3 | 33 | 36 | |
| France | 22 | 14 | 36 | |
| Italy | 27 | 7 | 34 | |
| Austria | 25 | 25 | ||
| Ecuador | 24 | 24 | ||
| Egypt (Arab Rep.) | 22 | 22 | ||
| Ireland | 14 | 14 | ||
| Zambia | 10 | 10 | ||
| Malaysia | 4 | 4 | ||
| Central African Republic | 3 | 3 | ||
| Myanmar (Burma) | 2 | 2 | ||
| Malawi | 2 | 2 | ||
| New Caledonia | 2 | 2 | ||
| Nepal | 2 | 2 | ||
| Bolivia | 1 | 1 | ||
| Norway | 1 | 1 | ||
| Republic of China | 1 | 1 | ||
| Sweden | 1 | 1 | ||
| TOTAL | 519062 | 276301 | 189090 | 984453 |
| Country | 2003 | 2004 |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | 238.1 | 247.6 |
| United States | 43.0 | 48.0 |
| South Africa | 78.7 | 74.9 |
| Former Soviet Union | 41.0 | 55.7 |
| Poland | 16.4 | 16.3 |
| Canada | 27.7 | 28.8 |
| People's Republic of China | 103.4 | 95.5 |
| South America | 57.8 | 65.9 |
| Indonesia | 107.8 | 131.4 |
| Total | 713.9 | 764.0 |
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