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US producer Core boosts PRB coal sales volume outlook

  • : Coal, Coking coal, Electricity
  • 25/08/05

US coal producer Core Natural Resources expects to sell more Powder River Basin (PRB) coal in 2025 than previously anticipated because of stronger domestic utility demand.

Core said Tuesday it expects its 2025 PRB coal shipments to be in the range of 45mn–48mn short tons (40.8mn–43.5mn metric tonnes). The company had previously anticipated PRB sales to be in the range of 39mn–42mn st.

"The Powder River Basin segment delivered another strong performance as power generators sought to accelerate shipments in advance of the summer season," Core chief executive Paul Lang said. Domestic market conditions strengthened with a "notable" increase in utility-driven demand and customers seeking thermal coal in both spot and term contracts.

The company kept its outlook for high calorific value (cv) thermal coal sales and metallurgical coal sales unchanged.

At the end of last quarter, Core had 47.8mn st of PRB coal under contract to ship this year, priced at $14.40/st, as well as 30mn st of high-cv thermal coal and 7.5mn st of coking coal.

"This places us near fully contracted for the remainder of 2025," Core's chief financial officer Mitesh Thakkar said.

Committed 2025 volumes for all of Core's segments were higher than they had been at the end of the first quarter. All but 200,000st of the high-cv steam coal under contract is priced at $60-$62/st, while 4.5mn st of the coking coal is priced at $118.20/st and the rest is committed but not yet priced.

The company also has 33mn st in the PRB segment committed in 2026, priced in the mid-$14/st range, and 13mn st of high-cv coal. Half of the high-cv thermal coal Core has under contract to ship next year is going to international customers.

Core did not say how much high-cv or metallurgical coal under contract to ship in 2025 is being exported.

Core's PRB outlook improved as utilities delayed planned coal-fired power plant retirements. A number of coal burning utilities have revised their integrated resource plans, extending the operational life of existing plants to meet growing capacity needs, Thakkar said.

Increased electricity demand also has grid operators' reserve margins, resulting in higher capacity prices in the PJM Interconnection, which help some of Core's high-cv business. The tighter reserve margins in the Midcontinent Independent System Operator and Southwest Power Pool also could support PRB coal demand through 2026 and 2027, Thakkar said.

Additionally, new legislation lowering the royalty rate for surface coal mining on federal lands is expected to reduce costs and improve the competitiveness of Core's PRB operations as well as its West Elk mine in Colorado. The company lowered its cost guidance by approximately $1/st, to a range of $12.75-$13.25/st, reflecting the anticipated impact of the royalty reduction on PRB coal.

Core projected that it will ship overall around 81.5mn-87mn st of thermal and metallurgical coal this year, up from its May forecast of 75.5mn-81mn st.

The midpoint of Core's revised expectations for this year still is slightly lower than the combined 85mn st sold in 2024 by Arch Resources and Consol Energy before the two companies merged in January to form Core.

In the second quarter Core shipped 12.6mn st of PRB coal and 8.4mn st of high-cv thermal coal. It also sold 2.24mn st of metallurgical coal.

Core did not detail second quarter 2024 volumes. Separate reports filed by Arch and Consol last year show Arch had 11.3mn st of thermal coal sales and 2.2mn st of coking coal shipments in April-June 2024 while Consol's Pennsylvania mining complex sold 5.8mn st of thermal and metallurgical coal and the Itmann coking coal mine in West Virginia shipped 164,000st.

Core's metallurgical segment last quarter was again constrained by global trade headwinds and the longwall outage at the Leer South mine. Core and regulators re-entered the sealed portion of the mine in June and found the longwall equipment largely unaffected, but the mine section was re-sealed shortly after because of elevated carbon monoxide levels. The company is now working with federal and state officials to recover and move the longwall equipment by the end of October, with plans to resume production in the fourth quarter.

Core previously expected to restart longwall production at Leer South by the middle of this year.


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