Coal
Displacing Nat Gas...Already
31
October, 2013
In
January, 2012, the price of nat gas plunged to below $2/mcf due to
overproduction by shale operators. Such low prices did, indeed,
prompt utilities to switch from coal fired generation to natural gas
fired generation if they had the capacity. Industry crowed that this
was the shape of things to come with electricity costs plummeting for
consumers and heralding the end of “King Coal”.
Unfortunately,
as with most aspects of unconventional shale production, this proved
short lived and oversold. Glaring numbers show another picture
altogether.
Electricity
generation from natural gas began to fade only months after it had
gained ground in much the same way that shale gas wells fade only
months after initial production. As gas prices moved up to trade
between $3.50-4/mcf, utilities promptly began switching back to using
coal for generation.
According
to EIA (Energy Information Administration):
“During
the first half of 2013…the price of natural gas delivered to
electric generators averaged $4.46 per MMBtu, 44 percent higher than
the same period last year.”
EIA
continued with:
“Electric
generators have been running their existing coal capacity at higher
rates so far this year in response to the increasing cost of natural
gas relative to coal.”
This
is of note for several reasons.
Firstly,
industry and its proponents including such entities as the Wall
Street Journal, have made fantastical comments about nat gas
providing “benefits to the poor” which will be long lived
particularly with respect to lower electricity costs for the
consumer. Such benefits are already evaporating. We do not live in
Camelot regardless of industry and media hype.
Secondly,
but most importantly, we can now safely assume that nat gas is priced
out of the market for electricity generation somewhere between
$3.50-4/mcf. That produces an enormous difficulty for natural gas
producers in that the break-even costs of unconventional shale wells
is considerably higher with the average probably falling around
$6/mcf. Exportation of shale gas will drive these prices higher still
creating an unfavorable climate for natural gas as a primary source
of electricity generation. That means all those purported “benefits
to the poor” are non-existent over the long term. It also means
that producers cannot keep this game going forever without incurring
significant and further losses which are already quite considerable.
Or exporting enough to make up the difference in domestic use. But
this of course means that the U.S. will be exporting a natural
resource rather than converting those resources into finished product
to be exported which historically would provide greater economic
benefit. In other words, everything about this picture is essentially
based on knee jerk corporate and governmental policy decisions.
Always a bad plan.
Utility
use of nat gas ramped up in 2012 but as quickly as March, 2013,
Reuters reported:
“U.S.
utilities will use more coal and less natural gas to generate power
as coal becomes cheaper and gas more expensive, electricity traders
said on Friday.”
A
few months later in June 2013, a further statement by World Resources
Institute confirmed this:
“Electricity
markets are very dynamic, and while there’s been a lot of press
about the success story of the benefits of natural gas, it’s
important to realize that that’s temporary and it depends on gas
prices staying really low, and we’re starting to see there are
these thresholds where utilities will switch back to higher-carbon
fuel, like coal.”
Interestingly,
however, industry continued to tell a different story. In September
2013, Lynn Lachenmyer, a senior vice president at Exxon Mobil, told
attendees in her keynote address at the Petrochemical Maritime
Outlook conference:
“[Natural
gas] is penetrating into the power sector, which has been
predominantly coal in the past. We see it making tremendous inroads
there.”
All
present tense but in direct contrast with the actual use figures
which had swung back toward coal. In other words, increased nat gas
use was already past tense. Further, Ms. Lachenmeyer stated:
[By
2040] wind will make up just 7 percent of the world’s stockpile of
energy… and solar will make up just 2 percent. Meanwhile, oil and
natural gas will make up 60 percent of the world’s energy supply in
30 years, up from 55 percent today.”
Visions
of Camelot once again.
And
yet only one month prior to Ms. Lachenmeyer’s comments, the IEA
(International Energy Agency) stated in its second annual Medium-Term
Renewable Energy Market Report:
“Power
generation from hydro, wind, solar and other renewable sources
worldwide will exceed that from gas and be twice that from nuclear by
2016.”
This
is an enormous discrepancy with ExxonMobil’s prognostications. In
fact, someone’s prognostications are hinting at delusions. Given
that IEA’s figures state that renewables will overtake gas in a
mere three years and thus are much closer in terms of the future, it
stands to reason that the IEA figures are probably more valid than
ExxonMobil forecasts for 2040.
Even
more damning are the IEA forecasts which extrapolated from the
impressive growth rate seen in 2012 within the renewable sector. For
instance, global renewable generating capacity grew more than 8% in
spite of extreme lobbying by the fossil fuel industry in countries
like the U.S. which caused a challenging investment and policy
climate for the renewable industry to say the least.
Nevertheless,
according to Fuel Fix:
“In
absolute terms, global renewable generation in 2012 – at 4 860 TWh
– exceeded the total estimated electricity consumption of China.”
That
is an astonishing growth pattern.
But
perhaps the answer to Exxon’s discrepancy lies in the comments of
IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven as she presented at the
Renewable Energy Finance Forum in New York. Ms. van der Hoeven
stated:
“As
[renewable] costs continue to fall, renewable power sources are
increasingly standing on their own merits versus new fossil-fuel
generation.”
There
is no doubt that gets the attention of executive management teams in
the fossil fuel industry. Ms. van der Hoeven went on to state:
“Many
renewables no longer require high economic incentives. But they do
still need long-term policies that provide a predictable and reliable
market and regulatory framework compatible with societal goals. And
worldwide subsidies for fossil fuels remain six times higher than
economic incentives for renewables.”
Renewables
are, therefore, standing on their own globally in spite of an extreme
bias toward fossil fuel use. Imagine a world where those subsidy
monies were transferred to renewable generation and research and
development. That, no doubt, would be a policy exercise to be fought
tooth and nail by the fossil fuel industry.
In
fact, such incredible growth in the renewable sector probably has
much to do with the extreme hyperbole, overestimation of reserves,
underestimation of costs, etc. surrounding unconventional fuels. The
fossil fuel industry does, indeed, need to convince us that business
as usual can be a maintained. After all, they are losing market share
in spite of their glowing reports.
But, but....
Peak
Coal Passed in 2008 as Mining Costs Rise, Group Says
31
October, 2013
Coal
reserves in the U.S. are lower than government and industry estimates
because the shallow deposits that are cheaper to access have been
largely mined out, according to a study by a group urging the country
to pursue renewable energy.
Clean
Energy Action in Boulder, Colorado, said in a report today that the
U.S. passed its peak coal production in 2008, and that production
will become increasingly difficult and expensive across the country.
Only one of the top 16 coal-producing states, Indiana, is likely to
see record production in the future.
Traditional producers such as
Pennsylvania and West Virginia hit their peak decades ago, it said.
“Independent
of arguments about climate change and clean coal, coal’s days are
very likely numbered due to questions of economic supply,” Zane
Selvans, the assistant director of research at Clean Energy Action,
said in a statement. “We are rapidly approaching the end of
accessible U.S. coal deposits that can be mined profitably.”
The
group’s conclusions are at odds with forecasts from the U.S. Energy
Information Administration and the National Mining Association. Coal
production and use in the U.S. has bounced back this year, after
production fell to a two-decade low in 2012, and coal use in power
plants for power production was displaced by cheap natural gas.
This
year, coal use rose more than 8 percent over the first six months of
2013 compared to the same period in 2012, according to the EIA.
Mining
Association
Hal
Quinn, the president of the National Mining Association, said Oct. 21
in a meeting with Bloomberg editors and reporters that coal use is
projected to be up 7.5 percent this year compared to 2012, and its
use will continue largely unabated through 2020, even in the face of
a boost in production of natural gas and a 2015 deadline for new
regulations from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Quinn’s
group, which represents companies such as Arch Coal Inc. (ACI) and
Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU), held a rally with coal miners on Capitol
Hill yesterday at which supporters said the U.S. has a 200-year
supply of coal, and that if the EPA backs off more regulation, the
fuel represents the cheapest way to produce electricity.
The
environmental group’s report today said the cost of delivering coal
rose 7.72 percent a year from 2004 to 2012, and expenses are likely
to continue to rise.
Meanwhile, the EIA data used to estimate a
200-year supply of coal is faulty, because it doesn’t fully capture
the economic viability of mining that coal, it said.
“Rising
coal costs reflect the rising costs of production for coal as it
becomes increasingly difficult to access the remaining coal,” the
report said.
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