High energy prices spur a new coal rush!
ST. LOUIS - Good times are back at the
Skyline coal mine in Helper, Utah.
Arch Coal Inc. closed the mine and laid off 200 workers two years ago, when
coal was just too cheap to justify extracting. But a mini coal boom is changing
all that. St. Louis-based Arch is investing about $40 million to reopen the
mine and local miners are lining up for work.
“We’re in about as good a condition
as we’ve been in some time,” said Delynn Fielding, director of economic
development for Carbon
County, where the mine is
located. Fielding’s words could apply to the coal industry overall. Companies
like Arch have seen surging profits and record-high stock prices. Expansion
plans are in the works, from new coal mines to coal-fired power plants. In Washington, a new energy
bill has lessened the fear of regulatory hurdles for future coal burning.
But while consumers pay close
attention to gasoline prices, few follow the market for a rocky fuel that
generates about half of the nation’s electricity. “For whatever reason, (coal
is) not in the forefront of people’s minds when they think about energy,” said
Fred Freme, a coal industry researcher with the U.S. Energy Information
Administration. “But without it, half the lights in the country would go out.”
Coal is in the limelight this fall
since increased demand and tight supply have pushed up prices, said Mark
Reichman, an analyst with A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. in St. Louis. Prices rose thanks to factors
ranging from a train wreck last spring to economic growth in China, he said.
The price of a futures contract for a ton of coal in the Western
United States rose from about $9 in June to $19.50 in October, and
that’s no blip, Reichman said.
“I think maybe we are entering a
little bit of a new price range for coal,” he said. The benefit is clear for
the nation’s two biggest coal companies. The largest, Peabody Energy Corp.,
reported a 141 percent increase in profits during the third quarter. Arch
reported a 75 percent increase.
Globally, the coal supply tightened
two years ago when China
switched from exporting coal to importing to feed its own energy needs, said
Rich Bonskowski, a geologist with the Energy Information Administration. Coal
consumers in Europe, the United States
and India
are bidding up prices on supplies from smaller producers like Australia and South Africa,
he said.
Supplies in
the United States
tightened further in May when two trains derailed on a track that carried
roughly 370 million tons of coal annually, about a third of the nation’s
supply. Shipments will remain hindered until December, Bonskowski said. The
derailment had an outsized impact because utility companies hadn’t built up
coal reserves last year, expecting the price to drop, Bonskowski said. With
winter around the corner and electricity demand expected to rise, utility
companies now have little choice but to buy coal on the open market, he said.
But coal remains a far cheaper
energy source, said Bonskowski. In July, it cost about $17 to generate a
megawatt of electricity for an hour using coal. It cost $59 to generate the
same energy with natural gas and $64 with liquid fuels such as kerosene,
Bonskowski said. Coal carries hidden costs, such as the price of complying with
air pollution rules, but as long as the price remains lower than other energy
sources, it will be attractive to utilities, he said.
Coal companies are ramping up
efforts to meet the demand and cash in on higher prices. Arch executives have
outlined $400 million worth of investment to open and expand mines from West Virginia to Utah, and Peabody’s management has
announced expansion plans that could generate 75 million tons of coal in five
years.
Peabody’s stock hit a record high Oct. 3 when
it closed at $86.12 per share on the New
York Stock exchange. Arch soon followed when its
stock hit an all-time high Nov. 3, closing at $80.31. Although they remain at
historical highs, both stocks have declined since that time, with Peabody
trading at $72 per share Tuesday and Arch trading near $69 per share.
New federal
law, such as the 2005 Energy Policy Act passed in August, is paving the way for
coal’s expanded use, Bonskowski said. The biggest regulatory changes are geared
toward the electric utility plants, which consume about 90 percent of all coal
in the United States,
he said.
The energy
bill sets a limit on the plants’ emissions, but gives utility companies wide
discretion for meeting the limits, Bonskowski said. If a utility can’t meet the
standard it can pay the government for extra emissions. The energy bill doesn’t
mean it will be a free-for-all when it comes to building coal plants. Peabody has faced stiff
opposition from the Sierra Club and other environmental groups as it presses
forward with new power plants in the midwest.
In Kentucky, the Sierra Club filed a request
with state authorities asking them to review Peabody’s plans to build a new power plant.
The move has stalled a regulatory process that Peabody began in 2002. The Sierra Club plans
to resist new coal plants where they are proposed nationwide because emissions
from the plants increase cases of asthma and other respiratory diseases, said
spokesman Brendan Bell.
“If even a fraction of these (power)
plants get built, we will be stuck with these plants for 30 or 40 years,” he
said.