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EIA cuts US coal burn forecast for 3rd month

  • : Coal, Electricity
  • 22/07/12

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) lowered its outlook for domestic coal consumption in 2022 for a third month in a row.

The agency projected US power plants will consume 482mn short tons (437mn metric tonnes) of coal this year, according to its Short-Term Energy Outlook. That is down from projections of 484mn st last month and 517mn st in April and would make coal burn this year lower than 2021's 501mn st.

EIA tied its expectations for lower electric power coal consumption to persistent supply constraints, such as rail transportation issues and limited coal availability. The agency forecast coal-fired generation will drop to 854bn kWh this year from 893bn KWh in 2021.

Coal supply has been tight for more than a year, particularly in the eastern US, leading utilities to conserve inventories and limit coal burn levels. EIA forecast US power plants will hold 77mn st of coal by the end of 2022, down from 138mn st in 2020 and 99mn st at the end of 2021. The agency projected last month that power plant inventories would be 87mn st at the end of this year.

Further tightening supply is a greater pull from international markets. EIA raised its outlook for 2022 US thermal coal exports to 42mn st from 38mn st projected last month. The US exported about 40mn st of steam coal in 2021.

If the US ships more thermal coal overseas, that would likely mean less coal availability for domestic power plants.

EIA also cut its 2022 US coal production projection to 595mn from 601mn st. The projection would have US mines producing 17mn st more coal this year than they did in 2021. Most of the increase would come from western coal mines. EIA forecast coal output in the Appalachias and interior US will climb by a combined 1.7mn st from a year earlier.

Coal is facing increasing competition from renewable energy as well. EIA projected renewable power, including hydro, will rise to 898bn kWh in the US in 2022 from 795bn kWh last year. EIA expects gas power to climb by 2pc year over year to 1,505bn in 2022. Total generation was projected to increase by 2pc also.

For 2023, EIA forecast gas and coal generation will fall from this year while renewable energy will continue to rise. US coal power is projected to drop next year to 807bn kWh and gas to 1,472bn kWh. Renewable energy is forecast to increase to 962bn kWh in 2023.

EIA said the decline in coal generation reflects the retirement of more coal-fired units and other market constraints. In 2023, coal production is expected to inch down to 595mn st amid a decline in output from mines in the Appalachias and interior US, according to the agency.

EIA also forecast thermal coal exports will decline by about 11pc to 37mn st in 2023 compared with 2022 projections.


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