US Coal Production Falls To Lowest Levels Since 1986
   January 13th, 2016 by  Joshua S Hill 
   The US has seen its coal production levels fall to their lowest  levels since 1986, dropping 10% in 2015 as part of a longer  downward-trend.
   Figures published by the US  Energy Information Administration  (EIA) earlier this month show that coal production has continued to  decline since 2008, and in 2015 only reached (an expected) 900 million  short tons (MMst), 10% lower than just the year before, and the lowest  level since 1986, nearly 30 years prior.
   Specifically, production from the Appalachian Basin fell the most in  2015, but lower natural gas prices and lower international demand for  American coal is behind the country’s declining coal production figures.
     
   Across America’s five major coal producing basins, the largest  decline can be seen to be in the Central Appalachian Basin, due  primarily to “difficult mining geology and high operating costs.”  Specifically, production in the Central Appalachian Basin was 40% below  its annual average (determined over 2010-2014).
     
   The Northern Appalachian Basin, Rocky Mountain region, and Powder  River Basin all saw their own production figures fall by between 10% and  20%.
   Offsetting the trend somewhat, the Illinois Basin saw 8% higher production levels in 2015 over its annual average.
   The majority of America’s coal production is filtered through to  electricity generation (though coal exports also declined in 2015,  especially to major coal export destinations such as Europe and China).  However, with the decline in gas prices and the increase in renewable  energy generation capacity, the demand for coal-generated electricity is  slipping.  In 2014,  coal generated 39% of the country’s electricity, with natural gas  generating 27% and renewables only generating 7%. With a bumper 2015,  America’s renewable energy industry installed a lot of capacity —  capacity that will only continue to grow in 2016 — which will have an  almost one-for-one impact on coal’s generating and production figures  when the EIA releases its 2015 statistics in the coming months.     cleantechnica.com |