Searles Valley Minerals Inc. is a raw materials mining and production company with corporate offices in Overland Park, Kansas. It is owned by the Indian company Nirma.[1][2] It has major operations in the Searles Valley centered in Trona, California where it is the town's largest employer.[3][4] The company produces borax, boric acid, soda ash, salt cake, and salt. It also owns the Trona Railway.[1][5]
The Trona facility extracts and ships 1.75 million tons of chemicals per year.[3]
History
The mining, production, and assets of the present day Searles Valley Minerals Inc. have a long and varied history.
When John Wemple Searles arrived in the area in the 1860s, he was looking for gold and silver to mine.[6] Instead he found a white crystalline powder, borax, in the dry Searles Lake bed.[7] In 1873, he went into production as the San Bernardino Borax Mining Company to mine borax. Long mule teams were used to haul borax in wagons to San Pedro, until the much closer settlement of Mojave was used after the Southern Pacific Railroad reached it in 1876.[7]
In 1895 The San Bernardino Borax Mining Company was sold by Searles to the Pacific Coast Borax Company, owned by Francis "Borax King" Smith.[7] He shut down production at the company's section of Searles Lake the next year.[7]
Argus Cogeneration Plant
The Argus Cogeneration Plant is a coal-fired power station located adjacent to the mineral processing plant in Trona, California. The power station has nameplate capacity of 63 MW and produced 296 GWh of electricity in 2018.[11] It is the last coal-fired power station still operating in California.[12]
Unit 1 was commissioned in 1978 and has a nameplate capacity of 63 MW.[12][13] Unit 2 was commissioned in January 1991 and had a nameplate capacity of 103 MW before ceasing operations on October 2, 2014.[14]
The power station is located at the coordinates 35.765°N, -117.38222°W.
Environmental problems
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife found that migrating birds stopping at the Trona plant brine ponds have died from salt toxicosis, salt encrustation, and oiling. In 2005, Searles agreed on a mitigation plan which "allows for the continuing take of birds (not to exceed an average of 241 birds/year) in exchange for continued bird protection and rescue efforts and a contribution of up to $550,000 (plus $10K/year for maintenance for 40 years) for a 100+ acre wetlands creation project at the south end of Owens Lake," about 55 miles north.[16][17]
There are allegations of arsenic poisoning of plant workers.[18] SVM argued to the State Water Resources Control Board, that concentration of total dissolved solids, chlorides, sodium and other minerals are higher in natural ephemeral pools than in the company's depleted brine ponds.[19]
The Searles Lake brine is rich in arsenic, and a unique anaerobic, extremely haloalkaliphilic bacterium which uses arsenic for respiration has been isolated from the mud.
See also
- Energy in California
External links
References
- Ruth Justis. New owners for Trona plant The Daily Independent, November 28, 2007^
- Nirma shares soar 7% on acquisition of US coenvironment The Economic Times, November 27, 2007^
- Wesley G. Hughes. Town at 'End of the World' Friendliness Runs Deep in Remote San Bernardino County Desert Hamlet