It
looks to me as if the news is all bad for the human species.
Growth is dead, so there is not a chance in hell that human beings
are going to address the issues that face us. In addition, it
looks like we are seeing a long, grinding decline and as the economy
declines a mad rush for all the dirty forms of energy (like coal)
that are available so we will further exacerbate what is, I am sure,
an insoluble problem.
I
heard these warnings years ago from people like Teddy Goldsmith.
He may have been slightly out with the timing, but there is no
doubt that, barring a miracle, we are headed for extinction .
Cheery
news for a Monday morning!
The
Declining World Economy Turns To Coal
30
June, 2012
Dear
Readers: I’m currently writing a long-form post twice a month now
for Chris Martenson’s excellent website, Peak Prosperity.com.
Accordingly, I’ll be publishing the first (and free) part of these
essays here at Gregor.us. Enjoy. — Gregor
Oil,
natural gas, and alternatives dominate the headlines when it comes to
energy. But there’s a big and largely-overlooked revolution
occurring with the energy source likely to become the most preferred
fuel for a world in economic decline: coal.
The
United States coal sector has been hit very, very hard this spring.
Demand has been crushed by over 10%, as warm weather and bountiful
supplies of cheap natural gas have induced power plant operators and
all other users where possible to switch away from domestic coal. The
rapid change in fortune has sent the stock prices of big, listed
names such as Peabody and Arch down by double digit percentages, as
the Dow Jones US Coal Index has fallen below 160 from above 225 at
the start of 2012.
From
Bloomberg:
Central
Appalachian thermal coal futures, the U.S. benchmark, averaged $60.20
during the first quarter, down from an average of $73.58 in the year
ago period and down from a high of $143.25 in July 2008. “It’s
like a perfect storm,”
Mann said. “The three main challenges are the really mild winter, a
lethargic economy and on top of that, with gas prices being so low,
those utilities that can burn gas have opted to burn gas instead of
coal because gas is so cheap.” Cheap gas has undercut power
producers’ revenues because it drives down wholesale electricity
prices, squeezing margins for plants that run on nuclear, renewable
and coal power. Moody’s Investors Service changed its outlook for
the U.S. coal industry to “negative” from “stable” on May 7,
citing weak prices and a drop in power demand, and said it expects a
5 percent decline in prices for coal deliveries in 2013. The U.S.
Energy Information Administration expects the industry to see a 10.9
percent decline in coal consumption this year and Moody’s expects
U.S. coal demand from power
plants to
plunge by 100 million tons by 2020, the ratings company said in the
report.
Given
the rather weak near-term and long-term outlook for US coal demand,
it’s not surprising that within such a capital-intensive business,
a number of smaller coal producers were hit recently with bankruptcy
rumors. Indeed,
even large cap names like Arch Coal have seen an escalation of
concern over debt
levels.
Accordingly, many have concluded that coal — in an era of solar,
wind, and natural gas — has finally displaced itself due to its
problematic extraction, distant transportation, and overall costs. Is
coal finally going away as an energy source?
Not
a chance.
Indeed,
everything currently unfolding for coal in the United States is
precisely what is not unfolding
for coal globally. Prices to import natural gas to most countries via
LNG remain sky-high, easily protecting coal’s cost advantage. And
the demand for coal in the developing world remains gargantuan.
Accordingly, just as with oil, lower US demand simply frees up supply
to elsewhere in the world.
The
global coal juggernaut rolls onward.
Soaring US Exports
In
the same way that falling US oil consumption has freed up global
supply, so now is US declining coal demand freeing up production for
export. Last year marked a twenty-year high in US coal exports:
For
the full year of 2011, the US exported 107,259 thousand short tons of
coal. This was the highest level of coal exports since 1991. More
impressive: exports recorded a more than 25% leap compared to the
previous year, 2010. (see
data here, opens to PDF).
Additionally, this was also a dramatic breakout in volume from
the previous decade, which ranged from 40,000 – 80,000 thousand
short tons per annum.
The
United States remains a large consumer of coal, and currently places
second, behind China, in the top global users, which I call the Coal
7: China, USA, India, Japan, Russia, South Africa, and Germany.
Accordingly, this means that the US, which currently consumes about
15% of total global demand, is about to become a marginal new source
of global supply.
Although
most grades of coal are still trading at a cheaper price level than a
similar equivalent amount of BTUs sourced from natural gas, the
all-in costs of burning coal in the United States given our
regulatory framework is now higher than burning natural gas. In one
sense, this is not a new story. Indeed, the advent of the
Environmental Protection Agency in 1970 and the historic wave of
pollution regulations set the United States on a course away from
coal and towards natural gas over 40 years ago. Even the coal
industry is eager to advertise the long decline of coal-fired
pollution (as a portion of the whole) in the United States, which is
due overall to an increase in emissions control, but is mostly the
result of the rise of natural-gas-fired power since the early 1970s.
Global Coal Picture
What
has changed, however, is that coal is the preferred energy source of
the developing world.
In
addition, as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) has shifted its manufacturing to the developing
world over the past few decades, coal has been the cheap energy
source that has powered the rise of such manufacturing, especially in
Asia. Accordingly, the extraordinary increase in global coal
consumption the past decade is partly due to the OECD offshoring its
own industrial production. How are most consumer goods made? Using
electricity in developing world manufacturing centers, generated by
coal.
Only
a very small portion of the global public is aware that global
coal consumption has advanced by over 50% in the past decade.
According to data from the just-released
BP Statistical Review,
from 2001 through 2011, global consumption of coal rose an
astonishing 56%. Using the energy unit Mtoe (million tonnes oil
equivalent), global coal consumption rose 1,343 Mtoe, from 2,381 to
3,724 Mtoe. And this trend shows no sign of slowing down.
Additionally,
this advance contrasts greatly with the flattening of global oil
production and thus the slowdown in global oil consumption. Oil’s
price revolution has killed a great deal of oil demand. But few are
aware that while oil has fallen as a portion of primary world energy
supply, coal has stormed to prominence. This is why the export of US
coal, and world trade in coal, still has room to run.
Coal Hunger: It’s Not Just China
Coal
consumption in the robust Indian economy has grown rapidly in recent
years, averaging 8.5% per year in 2006-10 according to EIA data,
including growth of 10.8% in 2010. Although we have slightly reduced
our 2012-13 growth forecasts for India in light of global
developments, the economy is still expected to grow by around 8% per
year. Coal consumption is therefore expected to continue to rise
strongly, boosted by the long-term plan to increase thermal
power-generation capacity in an effort to increase access to
electricity in rural areas. In its new five-year plan for the period
2012-17 the Indian government envisages that the rate of annual
demand growth could stay at around 8%.
2008
saw the crossing of a major milestone in humanity’s march towards
industrialism, when, for the first time ever, more
than 50% of the world’s population became urban.
This
great migration from the countryside to the cities, which is
happening in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, is a primary driver
for coal demand, as millions of new city dwellers take their place in
the power grid. This recent table of projected urban population
growth rates from the Economist, in its piece on Emerging
Market Cities,
demonstrates that an enormous phase of change still lies ahead:
The
world continues to marvel at the growth rates seen in Chinese cities,
like Shanghai, which is expected to add over 200,000 new residents
per year in the 15-year period from 2010 to 2025. Such a pace will
grow the Shanghai population from its 2010 level of 16.6 million
residents to at least 19.6 million residents. However, the growth
rates of urbanization are even faster in emerging mega-cities such as
Kinshasa, Lagos, Karachi, Dhaka, Mumbai, and of course, Delhi. As
Mike Davis writes in his terrific book, Planet
of Slums:
Ninety-five
percent of this final buildout of humanity will occur in the urban
areas of developing countries, whose populations will double to
nearly 4 billion over the next generation…The scale and the
velocity of Third World urbanization, moreover, utterly dwarfs that
of Victorian Europe. London in 1910 was seven times larger than it
had been in 1800, but Dhaka, Kinshasa, and Lagos today are each
approximately forty times larger than they were in 1950.
Despite
the fact that the developing world has indeed increased its demand
for oil, thus taking nearly 100% of the supply freed up by weak OECD
economies, the economies of the developing world are largely running
not on liquid BTUs, but rather on BTUs from coal.
Coal’s
versatility, in that it can be stored cheaply and transported via
ship, rail, truck, or in smaller quantities by small personal
transport, makes it the logical energy choice for the developing
world. (This is not to say that wind and solar do not also make sense
in non-OECD nations. Indeed, the fast pace of growth in renewables in
the developing world is astonishing as well). Most important is that
the cheap price of coal, especially when burned without environmental
regulations, aligns with developing world wages.
For
those concerned with climate change, this is, of course, terrible
news. However, many of the world’s international organizations,
from the International Energy Agency in Paris to various OECD
policy-making groups, remain very focused on making sure that
developing world nations get access to electricity. There is a strong
view and strong agreement among Western policy makers that working to
ensure that the world’s poor have access to electricity is the most
transformative action to pull humanity out of poverty. Surely this is
why the World
Bank has
been investing heavily in coal-fired power production. From World
Bank Invests Record Sums in Coal,
via The Ecologist.
Rebounding Into Coal
The
financial crisis period of the past five years has served to
highlight the new and constant restraint that oil prices place on the
world economy. What’s over now is the fast growth made possible by
cheap, liquid BTU (oil). But this is precisely why the economies of
the non-OECD continue to increase their coal consumption, and why the
world economy — when it advances — rebounds into coal.
There
are enough BTUs from natural gas and coal to fund global economic
growth for years to come. If natural gas from North America was
exportable right now, then world prices for Liquefied Natural Gas
(LNG) would be much lower than the $14-$18 level seen from Europe to
Asia. Instead, North American natural gas remains landlocked and will
remain so until export facilities are completed. This makes for a
highly irregular pricing landscape in natural gas, in which Americans
pay $2.50 for a million BTUs of natural gas, while heavy importers
like Japan can pay as much as $17.00 per million BTUs. Accordingly,
it is coal and not natural gas that provides the converged pricing to
the world market. And with thermal coal trading around $2.50 –
$3.50 per million BTUs, the continuing transition to coal is
unstoppable.
In Part
II: Coal is the Fuel for a World in Decline,
we explain that a series of ongoing financial crises only accelerates
the transition to coal as the obvious energy source in a time a
declining wealth. As the world gets poorer, with higher-income OECD
economies set to converge with lower-income non-OECD economies, coal
remains the cheapest form of globally traded BTUs, adding low-cost
power to economies under pressure. Finally, using the just
released data from the BP Statistical Review,
we update the latest forecasts on the future crossover point, when
coal regains its number one position from oil and once again becomes
the primary energy source of the world.
Click
here to read Part II of
this report (free executive summary; paid enrollment required
for full access).
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