Tourism is the current star in Wyoming County economy

Feb. 25—Tourism and the Coalfields Expressway combined with coal are the foundation for an expanding economy in Wyoming County.

"Coal employment and production are up," said Sen. David "Bugs" Stover, R-Wyoming."Our population is increasing some, after years of declining."

Stover also noted there are now a few bed and breakfast inns in addition to other rental properties used by recreational trail riders in Mullens.

New possibilities

In addition to traditional mining operations, new technologies are bringing long-abandoned coal waste onto the center stage in an exploding global market.

For generations, waste from long-ago coal operations has been sitting in sludge ponds, gob piles, and impoundments across the county and the coalfields of southern West Virginia.

With the new technologies, those waste products can now be extracted and processed into products that are in great demand across the globe.

AmeriCarbon Products and Omnis Sublimation Recovery Technologies, both headquartered in Morgantown, have committed to constructing processing plants in Wyoming County.

AmeriCarbon Products is building the United States' first coal-to-carbon processing plant in Wyoming County's new $7 million Barkers Creek Industrial Park, located near Mullens.

In three to five years, converting coal into carbon products is projected to jump from the current $10-billion-a-year industry to a $100-billion-a-year industry — and Wyoming County is expected to play a significant role in the market, according to company officials.

Omnis will extract rare earth metals from coal waste, then sell them for components in cell phones, computers and other electronic devices.

Omnis' technology can extract pure metals from coal impoundment mineral waste using ultra-high heat without acids or harmful chemicals.

The technology recovers 100 percent of the metals, including all critical, strategic, and rare earth metals, with zero waste and no harmful emissions, according to officials.

Coal waste impoundments and gob piles are rich in critical metals, including strategic metals and rare earth metals. Millions of tons of these metals are concentrated from the natural coal seam sources. The coal mining process has concentrated these minerals, and they are available in the multitude of waste impoundments.

Reaching new audiences

The companies locating in the county are the result of months of work by Wyoming County Economic Development Authority Chairman Mike Goode and Director Christy Laxton.

"Coal is doing great and tourism is up," emphasized Jason Mullins, who serves as county commission president and is also owner of Rebel Smokehouse in Mullens.