Analysis-U.S. coal companies struggle to cash in on Europe crunch
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[May 17, 2022] By
Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. coal producers
are seeking to boost exports to cash in on soaring prices since Russia's
invasion of Ukraine but face big headwinds including shipping
bottlenecks, labor shortages, and a dismal long-term outlook
discouraging investments in new mines.
The outlook means the United States, which holds the world’s biggest
reserves of coal, is unlikely to play a major role in international
efforts to expand shipments of the fuel to Europe ahead of an expected
European Union ban on Russian imports this August to punish Moscow for
the invasion.
It also means the rally in global coal prices is unlikely to pull the
U.S. coal industry out of a more than decade-long tailspin driven by
federal and state efforts to slash carbon emissions that have led
utilities to replace coal with cleaner-burning natural gas, and solar
and wind power. U.S. President Joe Biden has set a goal to decarbonize
the U.S. power grid by 2035 to fight climate change.
"The ability of U.S. companies to respond (to the price rally) has been
limited by logistics challenges, like most industrial activity at the
moment," said Ted O'Brien, managing partner and chief commercial officer
at Oluma Resources, a Pittsburgh-based marketer of the fuel, citing
clogged railroads, labor shortages and the availability of new
equipment.
Ernie Thrasher, chief executive of Xcoal Energy & Resources, a coal
marketer, estimated that bans on Russian coal could remove 114 million
tons a year from global markets, but that the United States would be
poised to fill less than a tenth of that given the lack of investment in
the U.S. industry.
“That's really the issue," said Thrasher. "There's been virtually no
capital invested in the industry since 2015," he said adding Europe was
likely to rely most heavily on other countries like Colombia, Indonesia,
South Africa, and Australia to replace Russian coal.
U.S. coal production year-to-date is up 3.8% from the same period in
2021 at about 203.7 million short tons, according to the latest data
from the Energy Information Administration, marking a slight recovery
from the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic when output hit the lowest
level since 1965.
But exports have not kept up. Shipments of U.S. coal abroad in the first
quarter of 2022 slipped about 2.5% year-on-year to about 20.2 million
tons, the EIA said. And the logistics hurdles prompted the EIA to lower
its 2022 U.S. coal export forecast to 85.7 million tons, down about 3.7%
from its previous prediction in April.
The EIA said U.S. exports are expected to rebound about 3.6% in 2023 to
88.8 million tons.
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Heavy equipment excavate anthracite coal from a strip mine in New
Castle, Pennsylvania, U.S., July 13, 2020. Picture taken July 13,
2020. REUTERS/Dane Rhys
NOT WHAT SHAREHOLDERS WANT
One company that expects its exports to do well is Alliance Resource Partners,
which has mines from Illinois to West Virginia. President and CEO Joe Craft sees
the war driving U.S. export prices for both thermal coal burned in power plants
and metallurgical coal used to make steel higher than prices for domestic coal
for at least 18 months.
As a result, Alliance's export volumes should be more than 6 million tons this
year, up from about 4 million tons last year, and most likely will grow by an
additional 1.5 million tons in 2023, Craft said in a first quarter earnings call
this month.
But an industry-wide expansion of exports is unlikely to happen quickly as few
companies have new mines coming and most new investments are going toward
sustaining output from aging facilities, said O'Brien of Oluma.
Arch Resources Inc does not anticipate investing in new mines for thermal coal,
CEO and President Paul Lang said during the No. 2 U.S. coal supplier's earnings
call last month.
"I think we'll continue to generate cash out of these assets, but we're simply
not going to put any more cash into them," Lang said. "It's not what our
shareholders want and I don't think it's a good investment for us."
Top U.S. coal producer Peabody Energy Corp and other big miners Alliance, Arch
and Alpha Metallurgical Resources Inc did not respond to requests for comment
for this story.
The National Mining Association industry group said the supply chain problems
with rail, the primary means of transporting coal, is costing companies both in
lost shipments and extra labor.
"Mining companies are facing enormous difficulties getting coal to the
consumer," Katie Mills, an NMA lawyer, said late last month in testimony to the
Surface Transportation Board.
NMA spokesperson Ashley Burke told Reuters that the industry was “ramping up as
much as possible” to supply European buyers, but faced “limits to what the rail
transport and ports can handle.”
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner, editing by Richard Valdmanis and Marguerita Choy)
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