Coal, the fossil fuel that largely sparked the industrial revolution, may be facing the beginning of the end โ at least in terms of generatingย electricity.
There are increasing signs of the demise of the worldโs dirtiest fossil fuel, from a global oversupply to plummeting prices to China starting to clean up its pollutedย air.
Last week, the Carbon Tracker Initiative published an analysis โ Carbon Supply Cost Curves: Evaluating Financial Risk to Coal Capital Expenditures โ identifying major financial risks for investors in coal producers around theย world.
Saying the demand for thermal coal in China, the worldโs largest emitter of toxic greenhouse gases, could peak as early as 2016, the analysis also highlights $112 billion of future coal mine expansion and development that is excess to requirements under lower demandย forecasts.
โIn particular it shows that high cost new mines are not economic at todayโs prices and are unlikely to generate returns for investors in the future,โ said an accompanying media release.
โCompanies most exposed to low coal demand are those developing new projects, focused on the export market โฆ With new measures to cap coal use and restrict imports of low quality coal in China, it appears the tide is turning against the coalย exporters.โ
The analysis added that Chinaโs desire to reduce imports will impact prices and asset values for export mines in the U.S., Australia, Indonesia and Southย Africa.
โKing Coal is becoming King Canute, as the industry struggles to turn back the tide of reducing demand, falling prices and lower earnings,โ Anthony Hobley, CEO of Carbon Tracker Initiative,ย said.
A recent article in Mining Weekly also says the coal industry is indeed facing toughย times.
The article noted Coal Association of Canada president Ann Marie Hann agreed that about half of the global coal output at current pricing was being produced at aย loss.
โUntil a global rebalance between demand and supply takes place and the global economy rebounds, the coal industry will unfortunately probably see some more bad news over the coming months,โ Hannย said.
The story added that the prices for thermal coal, which is used to generate electricity, had fallen in recent years from about $190 per tonne in mid-2008 to $75 per tonne this year, while metallurgical coal (used to make steel) had dropped from a high of more than $300 per tonne in late 2011 to less than $120 perย tonne.
To perhaps make matters worse for the coal industry, it is being publicly attacked by the oil and gas sectors, which are trying to position themselves as cleaner fossilย fuels.
According to the Responding to Climate Change website, a number of the worldโs leading oil and gas companies voiced their concerns about climate change at last weekโs UN Climate Summit, arguing they can offer a future coalย cannot.
โOne of our most important contributions is producing natural gas and replacing coal in electricity production,โ Helge Lund, Statoilโs chief executive, was quoted asย saying.
Kevin Washbrook, a director for Voters Taking Action on Climate Change, a Vancouver organization that has fought against a proposed new coal export facility at Fraser Surrey Docks, agrees the thermal coal sector is inย decline.
โI think coal is in everyoneโs sights these days because coal is climate change,โ Washbrook told DeSmogBlog. โCoal has to be on the chopping block forย sure.โ
Washbrook added the UN, the International Energy Agency, big banks and insurance companies are acknowledging that the vast majority of coal must stay in the ground if humankind is to avoid catastrophic, runaway climateย change.
โWe need to see this current downturn [in the thermal coal sector] for what it really is โ our last good opportunity to leave coal behind and start the transition to emission-free energyย sources.โ
Photo Credit: Arnold Paul, Wikimediaย Commons
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