‘King of the coal’ Robert Murray dies at the age of 80
By Artemis Moshtaghian, CNN
HUNTINGTON, UT - AUGUST 11: Crandall Canyon Mine co-owner Robert Murray talks to a reporter after emerging from the mine to give pre-dawn news interviews and to report that a second bore hole has reached the vicinity of six coal miners still trapped 1,500 feet beneath the surface in on August 11, 2007 near Huntington, Utah. A previously completed 2 inch hole missed its mark and is being realigned. The 8 5/8-inch hole accurately reached its goal according to Murray and it will be used to send a video camera down to look inside the cavity. It can also be used to supply survivors with food, water, and air. Rescuers do not know yet if the miners are still alive following the August 6 cave-in. If the miners are, it will take several more days to free them. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
Robert “Bob” Murray, known in the industry as the king of coal, died due to complications from lung disease early Sunday morning surrounded by his family in the Ohio Valley, his lawyer Michael Shaheen told CNN.
Murray was diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, or coal miner pneumoconiosis, in July 2016 and had been battling the disease since, according to Shaheen and a statement by American Consolidated Natural Resources.
A fierce supporter of coal miners and the coal industry, Murray had just announced his retirement as chairman of the board of directors of American Consolidated Natural Resources Holdings last week.
“Throughout my life in and about coal mines and in our industry, I have given all that I had to our employees and their families to sustain their family livelihoods and jobs for the hardworking people in our mining communities,” Murray said in a statement announcing his retirement.
“Fran and I have lost a dear friend. Bob and Brenda have been our friends for three decades,” Ohio Governor Mike DeWine said in a statement on Monday. “Bob fought through his medical challenges with the same energy, drive, guts, and faith as he approached everything in life. In any conversation we had, Bob talked about his faith in God, his love of family, and his dedication to his employees. Fran & I will deeply miss him.”
Murray battled the US Environmental Protection Agency for years and opposed government environmental regulations. He even called the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, from which President Donald Trump withdrew the United States, “‘a meaningless fraud that will have no effect on carbon dioxide emissions,'” according to an obituary published by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He was also a strong Trump supporter who backed the president’s efforts to roll back environmental regulations.
Murray’s company, Murray Energy — America’s largest private coal miner — filed for Chapter 11 last year because it was unable to make payments to lenders. It emerged from bankruptcy in September, selling substantially all of its assets to American Consolidated Natural Resources. The coal industry hasn’t been able to compete with cheap natural gas and the plunging cost of solar, wind and other forms of renewable energy.