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EIA trims US coal power forecast for 2023

  • Spanish Market: Coal, Electricity
  • 11/04/23

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) is adopting a dimmer outlook than it previously had for 2023 domestic coal-fired generation, but increased its expectations for 2024.

Coal power this year will decline by nearly 17pc, or 136bn kWh, from 2022 levels to 687bn kWh, EIA projected today in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook, a 1.1pc decrease from the March EIA forecast.

The more restrained outlook is mostly the result of a drop in natural gas prices and lower-than-expected electric heating demand this past winter because of relatively mild weather throughout the US. Average coal generation in the lower 48 states was around a three-year low in the first quarter, according to preliminary daily EIA data.

Coal generation will likely continue to lose ground to natural gas and renewable power this year as power plant retirements accelerate. EIA expects utility-scale coal capacity to shrink by 4.6pc, or 9,200MW, over the course of this year, to 187,617MW in December. Another 2,200MW of coal generation will be decommissioned in 2024.

Natural gas capacity will inch up by 2,000MW this year to 480,500MW in December but then dip to 478,100MW by December 2024, EIA expects.

The agency also forecasts US utility-scale solar generating capacity will almost double between December 2022 and December 2024 to 134,000MW, while wind power capacity will increase by 14,900MW to 155,700MW.

Generation forecasts

The agency's natural gas-fired generation forecast for 2023 rose by 0.7pc from March to 1,568bn kWh. This is 1.1pc lower than the levels generated a year earlier.

EIA lowered its projections for the average spot Henry Hub natural gas price for 2023 to $2.94/mmBtu from the previous estimate of $3.02/mmBtu. This is down from the $6.42/mmBtu average in 2022.

EIA also raised its outlook for renewable power this year to 957bn kWh from a previous 951bn kWh. Renewable generation totaled roughly 883bn kWh in 2022.

Renewable generation will rise again next year, to 1,039bn kWh, EIA estimated.

Coal-fired generation will also increase in 2024, to 704bn kWh. That forecast is 1.4pc higher than EIA was projecting in March.

EIA trimmed its outlook for 2024 natural gas generation to 1,514bn kWh from the previous projection of 1,522bn kWh.

Coal consumption

US coal consumption will move in a similar pattern as generation. EIA projects electric power coal demand will fall by more than 14pc in 2023 to 402mn short tons (st) (365mn metric tonnes), but then will increase in 2024 to nearly 409mn st. Total US coal consumption, including industrial and metallurgical coal, will fall by 14pc to 440mn st this year and inch up to nearly 447mn st next year.

Coal production in the US is expected decrease by 6.5pc in 2023, to 558mn st, and fall by 9.3pc to 506mn st in 2024.

US thermal coal exports will increase this year to 43.5mn st from 38.4mn st in 2022. Seaborne thermal coal shipments will rise again in 2024, to 48.5mn st, EIA projects. Metallurgical coal exports are also expected to rise from the 46.4mn st shipped in 2022, to 48.8mn st this year and 53mn st in 2024.


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