Is Peak Coal Coming?

Posted by Jeff Rubin on April 27th, 2011 under SmallerWorld • 14 Comments

The price of oil isn’t the only hydrocarbon going through the roof. Check out thermal coal prices to see how dependent economic growth has become on burning increasingly amounts of fossil fuels. Prices of Newcastle coal, the Asian coal price benchmark, are poised by rise by as much as 30% this year, approaching the peak levels seen in 2008.

It is no surprise the countries driving global coal demand through the roof are the same countries pushing global crude demand. Find the fastest growing economies, and you will find where demand for oil and coal are the strongest.

China’s coal consumption is expected to rise by another 10% this year, propelled by strong economic growth, the soaring prices of diesel fuel and the fact water levels at most of the country’s hydroelectric sites are well below normal due to the severe drought this winter.

Demand in India, where power blackouts are still the norm and where 40% of the country’s 1.2 billion people still haven’t been hooked up to a grid, is expected to grow by more than 20% this year.

It is good news for coal prices but the only problem is whether production can keep pace. Sound familiar?

China’s coal industry already accounts for more than 40% of world production with less than 15% of the planet’s coal reserves. This is a rate of resource extraction that U.S. coal companies can only dream about.

Even so, domestic mine production in China lags runaway demand growth, forcing the world’s largest coal burner to turn to more foreign suppliers such as Australia. Last year, the Chinese economy burnt a staggering 3.2 billion metric tonnes of the stuff.

This is already a huge challenge to China’s railway system that is clogged with hauling billions of tonnes of coal from increasingly distant mines in the remote western regions of the country to the industrial heartland in the east.

But the Chinese economy faces an even more daunting challenge to its coal consumption than transportation logistics. Domestic coal production is rapidly approaching what even the Chinese government acknowledges to be a national production peak.

At the current extraction rate, China could hit that production peak as early as 2015. Once there, most estimates show a sharp drop off in the country’s coal production beginning around 2020. This is why Beijing is considering capping domestic coal production, fearing the country is depleting its remaining coal reserves far too quickly to sustain future economic growth.

This policy shift has sent Chinese coal companies scouring the world looking for new coal reserves. They have already spent $21 billion on overseas coal acquisitions.

As the largest coal producing country starts thinking about conserving its remaining coal reserves, you wonder just how far off we are from a world of peak coal?

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  • JB

    If China understands that – under the current international arrangements – it cannot secure sufficient energy past 2015-20 to maintain internal social stability, will Kingdom of the Middle not be strongly motivated to somehow “rearragne the cards”?

  • Rojelio

    Peak coal by 2015? That’s a lot of freakin coal between now and then. Too bad there’s as much as there is. It insures that we’ll decimate the climate by then. About 40% of the phytoplankton in the oceans are gone already according to Nature, which is a high quality journal. That can’t be good.

  • Pedrosantos

    If China is the number 1 consumer of Coal, and spends 21 billion on overseas coal ascquisitions, in spit of all the coal they have, may this be a way to China control the future coal market?
    If they start to control the coal market, coal prices are going the same way that oil does, and the rest of the countrys are going to start to pay for China’s growth.
    Coal is beeing associated to CCS( carbon capture storage), and if the carbon trading market starts to emerge…everyone is going to invest in this techonoly wich is goingo to rise de demand for Coal. This is the perfect excuse to Coal rising prices.
    Coal is going to be the future oil, if we change our transportation to electric and invest on Coal powerplants to supply them.

  • Pedrosantos

    Sorry for the english

  • Abitibidoug

    The good news is the higher price for coal will make renewable energy sources more viable without assistance like subsidies or tax breaks, so it will be a growth industry. After a temporary setback from the incident in Japan, there will be renewed interest in nuclear power also. The bad news is, as Rojelio said, is by the time peak coal occurs the extra carbon dioxide will affect the climate.

  • Abitibidoug

    The good news is the higher price for coal will make renewable energy sources more viable without assistance like subsidies or tax breaks, so it will be a growth industry. After a temporary setback from the incident in Japan, there will be renewed interest in nuclear power also. The bad news is, as Rojelio said, is by the time peak coal occurs the extra carbon dioxide will affect the climate.

  • Abitibidoug

    The good news is the higher price for coal will make renewable energy sources more viable without assistance like subsidies or tax breaks, so it will be a growth industry. After a temporary setback from the incident in Japan, there will be renewed interest in nuclear power also. The bad news is, as Rojelio said, is by the time peak coal occurs the extra carbon dioxide will affect the climate.

  • Abitibidoug

    The good news is the higher price for coal will make renewable energy sources more viable without assistance like subsidies or tax breaks, so it will be a growth industry. After a temporary setback from the incident in Japan, there will be renewed interest in nuclear power also. The bad news is, as Rojelio said, is by the time peak coal occurs the extra carbon dioxide will affect the climate.

  • Abitibidoug

    The good news is the higher price for coal will make renewable energy sources more viable without assistance like subsidies or tax breaks, so it will be a growth industry. After a temporary setback from the incident in Japan, there will be renewed interest in nuclear power also. The bad news is, as Rojelio said, is by the time peak coal occurs the extra carbon dioxide will affect the climate.

  • Larinda

    Who is it best to vote for on Monday re climate agenda?

  • Abitibidoug

    The Green Party would by far be the best choice, but the odds of them becoming the next government is extremely low. The NDP would be the next best choice, only time will tell if they become the next government.

  • Rojelio

    we’re at the point it doesn’t matter anymore who is in charge. Only a hard, deep long depression is bullish for the environment, not some politician who has been placed on your menu by the central banks. Fortunately for the environment, our leaders are committing us to economic suicide so we’ll be there soon.

  • Steve Manders

    Many Canadian resource companies are happy to get a generous offer for their natural resources and run with the money. It is hard to turn down a good offer. However, there is a debate as to whether the Canadian or provincial governments should block such deals. It did happen with Potash. Imagine when we get past peak oil, ( we are at peak now ) and we must export our remaining production to China as well as the USA because they were allowed to purchase it, then extract the product. Until there is a formal recognition of Peak Oil and other resources, I am afraid that we will sell off our birth right for a one time gains.

  • Velolover2

    And the effect on the environment from all this? Priceless. Human beings…the complete and utter mistake in the evolutionary chain. Too bad we will take down all the other species that live on our planet…it’s not even a fighting chance for them…