Number of U.S. coal mines falls to lowest on record

Credit: EIA

Climate Central

Reports of coal mining companies going bankrupt — at least 26 have done so since 2009 — come frequently these days as natural gas use rises at electric power plants and climate policy puts coal mine investors on notice for the future.

So it may come as no surprise that the number of new coal mines opening each year in the U.S. has fallen to its lowest point in at least a decade, and the total number of operating coal mines has hit its lowest point on record, according to a report released Wednesday from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Records date back to at least 1923.

Credit: EIA
Credit: EIA

Electric power generation, mainly through coal burning, is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change, making up 31 percent of total U.S. emissions in 2013. Of all the carbon dioxide emissions generated by the electric power sector, coal is responsible for 77 percent. It’s also the primary target of the Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan, which seeks to slash carbon emissions from power plants using fossil fuels 32 percent by 2030.

Coal companies opened 103 new mines in the U.S. in 2013, a 14 percent decline in producing coal mines over the previous year, EIA data show. Those mines opened as 271 others were idled or shut down in 2013, the most recent year for which data is available.

There were just over 1,000 operating coal mines in 2013, down from more than 1,400 in 2008.

Preliminary data for 2014 suggest that there was a slight increase in the number of coal mine openings last year, but the data are not yet complete and the trend is still downward, the EIA report says.

The decline of new coal mine openings has been partly fueled by the abundance of cheap natural gas and pre-dates the Clean Power Plan, which was announced in 2014 and finalized in August.

“Certainly, we’ve seen flatter electricity demand,” EIA operations research analyst Diane Kearney said. “There’s competition from natural gas. There’s been the Clean Power Plan on the horizon and the much-touted regulations that are kind of pending here and there. I think it’s a difficult climate just profit-wise because of competition with natural gas.”

Mining companies, which are being hit by lower international demand for coal, are reluctant to open new mines, she said.

 


report published in March by the London-based Carbon Tracker Initiative said that many U.S. coal companies have been hit by cheaper solar and wind power and the American fracking boom, which has flooded the market with natural gas, encouraging utilities to switch to gas from coal to produce electricity.

“Cheap gas has knocked coal off its feet, and the need to improve air quality and ever-lower renewables costs has kept coal down for the count,” Carbon Tracker researcher Luke Sussams said in a statement.

Source: Climate Central. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

2 responses to “Number of U.S. coal mines falls to lowest on record”

  1. Mike Dill Avatar
    Mike Dill

    It is a start. The US and AUS both need to get this closer to zero.

  2. Alastair Leith Avatar
    Alastair Leith

    “Electric power generation, mainly through coal burning, is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change, making up 31 percent of total U.S. emissions in 2013 ”

    Contrary to what the UN standardised emissions accounting tells us, in Australia our Land Use sector emissions are 55% of the total according to BZE and MSSI’s Land Use Report using 20 yr GWP accounting. Even with 100 year GWP accounting, which obscures methane emissions, we’re on track for Land Use GHG emissions be at 50% shortly. I imagine the USA is a similar story, given the planetary scale deforestation of the Amazon rainforests for ranching and for broad-scale soy cropping to feed factory cattle. Lot feeding does allow for better dietary controls of enteric fermentation, but the shear scale of livestock production, even in lots, presents a serious GHG problem to be understood and solved — quickly.

    Of those Land Use emissions in Australia 90% are associated with extensive zone grazing of ruminant livestock. The main sources of GHGs are enteric fermentation, land clearing and savannah burning. We could eliminate the bulk of these emissions and offset others to make the sector zero net emissions, but it would take action a lot more politically unpalatable to governments than the current Carbon Farming Initiative.

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