One
Of The Largest Coal Companies In The United States Just Filed For
Bankruptcy
CREDITBlack
Thunder Mine, in Wyoming, is owned by Arch Coal Co.
11 January, 2016
Arch
Coal, one of the United States’ largest coal companies, filed for
bankruptcy on Monday in the hopes of eliminating more than $4.5
billion in long-term debt, according to a press release issued
by the company.
The
news comes as several of Arch’s competitors — Patriot Coal,
Walter Energy, and Alpha Natural Resources — have also filed for
bankruptcy. Arch Coal is the second largest supplier of coal in the
United States behind Peabody Energy, and its mines represent 13
percent of
America’s coal supply.
Low
natural gas prices and environmental regulations made 2015 a tough
year for the U.S. coal industry, with domestic production levels
slumping to a 30-year
low.
Coal production has been on the decline for years, since peaking in
2008, and 2015’s production numbers represent a 10
percent decline from
2014. Recent
climate policies have
also hampered coal use, which is more expensive and polluting for
utilities than natural gas. In April, natural gas surpassed
coal,
for the first time ever, as the primary source of electricity
generation in the country (though it remained in the top spot for
only a month before being overtaken by coal).
“U.S.
coal consumption is declining dramatically as coal-fired power plants
are shutting down. Coal is being displaced by renewables and natural
gas, and the Asian markets that all coal companies were looking to as
their saviors are moving in the opposite direction,” Ross
Macfarlane, senior advisor with Climate Solutions, told
ThinkProgress. “[Arch’s bankruptcy filing] wasn’t unexpected,
but it’s still very significant in that it shows that the
second-largest coal company in the United States is unable to pay its
debts and provide any return at all to its shareholders.”
As
a company, Arch has seen a fairly rapid decline in the value of its
shares following a flurry ofdomestic
acquisitions in
2011. Those acquisitions, which totaled in the millions, were based
on the presumption that the coal industry would see rapid overseas
growth in the coming years. That overseas growth never materialized,
with coal consumption several key nations like China peaking, or
appearing to peak, in the past few years. In early 2011, stock in
Arch Coal peaked at $260 a share — on Monday, shares in Arch Coal
were worth less
than a dollar.
During that time, Arch Coal executives doubled
their pay,
despite falling share prices.
Under
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, Arch Coal will exchange much its
debt to lenders for equity in the company, known as a debt-for-equity
swap. According
to the Wall Street Journal,Monday’s
filing comes after months of unsuccessful attempts to stave off
bankruptcy, including out-of-court negotiations with creditors to
financially restructure the company. In November of 2015, however, it
appeared as though those attempts were falling apart, and Arch
Coal announcedin
its quarterly earnings report that it could file for bankruptcy in a
matter of months.
In a company-issued press release, Arch framed the bankruptcy in a positive light, arguing that financial restructuring would better position the company for long-term success.
“After
carefully evaluating our options, we determined that implementing
these agreements through a court-supervised process represents the
best way to solidify our financial position and strengthen our
balance sheet,” Arch’s chairman and CEO John W. Eaves said in the
press statement announcing the Chapter 11 filing. “We are confident
that this comprehensive financial restructuring will further enhance
Arch’s position as a large-scale, low-cost operator.”
Arch
Coal currently has some $600 million in cash and short term
investments, and expects to receive another $275 from lenders. That
amount, the company says, will be enough to sustain operations
through bankruptcy, and the company expects to maintain its mining
operations throughout the proceedings.
The bankruptcy filing, however, could impact Arch Coal’s operations both at the mines and along the West Coast, which has seen an uptick in proposals for fossil fuel export terminals in recent years. Arch Coal is co-owner of the proposed coal export terminal at the Millennium Bulk Terminals site in Longview, Washington — if completed, the coal export terminal would be the largest in the country.
Currently, it’s one of just two coal export
terminals still under consideration by the Washington Department of
Ecology. If built, proponents argue that
the export terminal would represent a $680 million investment that
could spur infrastructure and employment in a critically
underemployed area
of Washington.
But
the bankruptcy filing — which follows financial
troubles suffered
by another investor in the project, Ambre Energy — threatens the
financial feasibility of the project, Macfarlane argues.
“It’s
a clear confirmation that the markets are not seeing any significant
upside potential in coal and that the company is fighting for its
financial life,” Macfarlane said. “The prospect that it is going
to raise the $650 million to $1 billion that is estimated is needed
to do this project is effectively zero.”
Macfarlane
also worries about what will happen to the land that Arch is
currently mining. Federal law requires coal companies to guarantee
that, in the event that the company goes under, mines will be cleaned
up — these are known as “reclamation
bonds”
and are required by federal law for any mining permit. But instead of
setting setting aside money or purchasing what are akin to insurance
policies, Congress has allowed coal companies to back up those
assurances with “self-bonds”
— promises that rely on the financial health and reputation of the
coal company. As recently as September, Wyoming has allowed Arch Coal
to self-bond to
cover its reclamation requirements, meaning that if the company is
not financially healthy enough to cover those self-bonds, the
government and taxpayers could be left shouldering the burden.
“There’s
a danger that the state and the public may be left with pennies on
the dollar compared to the costs of actually reclaiming and restoring
this public land that has been devastated by the coal company
itself,” Macfarlane said.
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