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Coal Production Collapses To 35-Year Low

Coal production in the first three months of 2016 was 173 million short tons, the lowest quarterly level in the United States since a major coal strike in the second quarter of 1981. Among the regions tracked by the EIA, the Powder River Basin (PBR) in Montana and Wyoming saw the largest decline both in terms of absolute tonnage and as a percentage of the previous quarter.

Demand for coal has dropped off steeply as natural gas becomes the primary fuel source for electrical generation. Electricity generation accounts for more than 90 percent of domestic coal use, but environmental regulations have caused the fuel source to fall out of favor. Compounding the problem for coal producers, electricity demand is growing more slowly, while historically-low natural gas prices are making it easier for electricity generators to switch to the cleaner burning fuel, reports the EIA.

A 17 percent decrease in coal production from the previous quarter marked the largest quarter-over-quarter decline since the fourth quarter of 1984. Mild winters both this year and last were likely responsible for the steep decline in production in the beginning of this year. Electric power plants purchased more coal than they needed throughout the fourth quarter of 2015, resulting in a 34 MMst build in coal stockpiles, the highest Q4 net increase on record.

Electric power generators were encouraged to burn coal from their stockpiles rather than purchase more from coal producers in the first quarter of the year. Data from the American Association of Railroads showed coal carloads were down 20 percent quarter-over-quarter as power generators ordered less coal.

The drop in demand for coal was not concentrated in any particular region, either, the EIA reports. Texas, Michigan, Illinois and Oklahoma accounted for an average quarterly demand of 37 MMst of Powder River Basin coal in 2015, or about 40 percent of total PBR production. Demand for PBR coal from those four states fell 49 percent to 19 MMst in the first quarter of the year. First-quarter PBR coal production of 69 MMst was the lowest since 1995.

By Oil & Gas 360

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  • JHM on June 13 2016 said:
    In 2015, capacity factors for coal and combined cycle natural gas plants were 55% and 56%, respectively. This indicates that the US is substantially oversupplied with baseload capacity, and the two fuels are simply competing on price to stay in the market. Neither fuel can be profitable until about a third of the existing baseload capacity is retired.

    According to FERC over the last 12 months ending April 2016, coal has lost over 21 GW of operating capacity, which is a mere 6.7% annual decline, not nearly enough to balance the market. Meanwhile natural gas and renewables have gained 9.2 and 13.1 GW of operating capacity respectively. From a capacity perspective, renewables now lead natural gas in replacing coal capacity. What is more worrisome here is that actually capacity factors are lower for natural gas than they ought to be for good economic performance.

    So natural gas plants are oversupplying the market with new capacity, and coal plants are not retiring fast enough. This places even gas plants at risk of pre-mature retirement. The power markets simply do not need as much baseload as they once did. For natural gas to return to profitability, at least 100 GW of coal needs to be retired this year.
  • Ness on June 12 2016 said:
    Sounds like you are long some coal stocks :)

    Good luck in getting any jury or judge to side with you
  • mchentrp on June 11 2016 said:
    The coal industry needs to sue the EPA.

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