Bloomberg Businessweek
 
 
Global Economics
Coal's Future Is Rocky at Best

 
By _Matthew Philips_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/authors/3404-matthew-philips)  on April 26, 2012 
 
Is coal doomed? The dirty yet abundant energy source has had some rough  
patches before, but nothing like this. In 1985 coal accounted for  57 percent 
of all power generated in the U.S. Last year it was  42 percent. The U.S. 
Energy Information Administration estimates it will  fall to 40 percent this 
year. Prices for Appalachian coal are down  24 percent over the past 12 
months; for coal from the Powder River Basin in  Montana and Wyoming, they’re 
down 45 percent. “With the prices you’re  looking at now, no one can make 
money,” says Lucas Pipes, an analyst at Brean  Murray, Carret.
 
Coal is in a struggle with a perfect adversary: ultracheap natural gas. 
With  all the shale reserves unlocked by fracking, gas prices have steadily 
declined  since mid-2008, to the point where they’re hovering around $2 per 
million  British thermal units for the first time in a decade. That’s lower 
than coal  prices. The natural gas is all domestically derived energy, so the 
country’s  fuel import bill doesn’t go up. It’s clean. And it’s so abundant 
that the  industry may run out of places to store it. Utilities that switch 
to natural gas  are already passing savings on to customers. In 2013 
residential U.S. utility  bills should fall 1 percent. 
 
 
   
With the price of natural gas around $2, everyone who can switch is  
switching. This year, Goldman Sachs (_GS_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=GS)
 ) energy analyst David Greely 
expects utilities to  change from coal to gas at the unprecedented rate of 4.9 
billion cubic feet  per day. In 2008 coal made up 70 percent of Southern Co.
’s (_SO_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=SO)
 ) electricity generation; now it’s  32 percent. At the 
same time, Southern has increased its gas-fired  generation from 16 percent to 
46 percent. Even utilities in West  Virginia, the heart of coal country, are 
converting. 
 
Since last April, shares of Peabody Energy (_BTU_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=BTU)
 ), the biggest 
coal producer in the U.S., have  dropped more than half, from $70 to $29. The 
stock of Arch Coal (_ACI_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=ACI)
 ) has gone from $35 to less than $10 in 
the same  period. Several coal producers have reported losses in the 
hundreds of millions  of dollars. “Cheap natural gas has really made a mess of 
a 
lot of these business  models,” says Kuni Chen, an energy analyst at CRT 
Capital Group. 
 
More trouble lies ahead. A number of old, dirty coal-fired plants are  
scheduled to be shut down by the end of 2014 in compliance with regulations 
from 
 the Environmental Protection Agency. That could drive another 5 percent of 
 coal demand out of the market, says Chen. 
Producers have been idling mines since January. In February, Patriot Coal 
(_PCX_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=PCX)
 ) idled its Big Mountain mine, laying off 250  workers. The 
next day, Alpha Natural Resources (_ANR_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=ANR)
 ), the biggest coal 
producer in West Virginia,  said it would close two mines in that state and two 
in 
Kentucky, resulting in  320 layoffs. Those mines that aren’t being shut are 
cutting back on production  and reducing worker hours and overtime. Many 
miners are retiring, and they’re  not being replaced.
 
It’s all quite a turnaround from a decade ago, when the coal lobby pushed 
the  idea that America’s energy future lay with its deep reserves of coal, 
the most  abundant on earth. That argument is rarely heard today.  
Not everyone believes coal is finished. Analysts at FBR Capital Markets, a  
Virginia-based investment bank, think most coal-to-gas switching has 
already  happened, and further switching will be much harder because of 
logistical 
 constraints and existing contracts. “King Coal is not so easily displaced,”
 says  FBR analyst Marc de Croisett. Overseas customers are materializing, 
too: U.S.  coal exports rose 57 percent from 2009 through the end of 2011. 
New power  generation in China and India could add 300 million tons of new 
coal demand  this year. Some of the most bullish people on coal are in the 
railroad business.  Union Pacific (_UNP_ 
(http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=UNP)
 ) Chief Executive Officer 
Jack Koraleski  foresees a strong summer for coal shipments. “Gas plants are 
running flat out  right now, so the growth has got to come from coal once 
everyone turns their air  conditioners on,” he says. “Coal is far from dead.” 
The question is whether it’s  mortally wounded.
 
The bottom line: Coal producers are getting hammered in  the stock market 
as lower natural gas prices cut into their  industry.

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