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Coal exports/imports decline in 2016 as US remains net coal exporter

graph of annual U.S. coal exports and imports, as explained in the article text

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on U.S. Census Bureau data

 Great Falls, Montana; Honolulu, Hawaii; and San Juan, Puerto Rico, customs districts were only ones to see increase in imports during 2016

The United States remained a net exporter of coal in 2016, exporting 60.3 million short tons (MMst) and importing 9.8 MMst, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

US coal exports fell for the fourth consecutive year, down 13.7 MMst from 2015, with 2016 exports less than half of the record volume of coal exported in 2012 (125.7 MMst).

Slow growth in world coal demand combined with supplier competition were the primary factors contributing to the decline in US coal exports.

US coal exports declined through most of 2016 despite mid-year increases in international coal prices.

Lower mining costs, cheaper transportation costs, and favorable exchange rates continue to provide a market advantage to other major coal-exporting countries such as Australia, Indonesia, Colombia, Russia, and South Africa.

Nearly 80 per cent of the coal exported by the United States in 2016 went to 10 countries.

Declining exports to 9 of those 10 countries accounted for two-thirds of the total drop in US exports.

One of the few increases in 2016 was exports to Brazil, which increased by nearly 0.6 MMst. China and Morocco also received increased amounts of US coal, but continue to absorb only a small fraction of total US coal exports.

US coal exports are mainly shipped from eight customs districts (ports defined by the US Census Bureau), which accounted for 95 per cent of US coal exports in 2016.

Norfolk, Virginia, the largest coal port, shipped 23.1 MMst of coal and accounted for 38 per cent of total US coal exports.

graph of U.S. coal exports from selected customs districts, as explained in the article text

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on U.S. Census Bureau data

US coal imports totaled 9.8 MMst in 2016, 13 per cent lower than the 11.3 MMst imported in 2015 and the first decline in imports since 2013.

The majority (90 per cent in 2016) of coal imported into the United States is steam coal, which is primarily used to generate electricity.

Colombia remained the predominant source of US coal imports, despite a decrease of 12 per cent (1.0 MMst) in 2016. Metallurgical coal imports, primarily imported from Canada, fell by 44 per cent (0.8 MMst) in 2016.

graph of U.S. coal imports at selected customs districts, as explained in the article text

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on U.S. Census Bureau data

US coal imports are mainly offloaded at a few customs districts, with six districts receiving 90 per cent of US imports in 2016.

Tampa, Florida, remained the largest recipient of coal imports in 2016, though imports into Tampa and Mobile, Alabama, declined by 16 per cent (0.6 MMst) and 17 per cent (0.5 MMst), respectively, driven by declines in imports from Colombia.

The Great Falls, Montana; Honolulu, Hawaii; and San Juan, Puerto Rico, customs districts were the only ones to see an increase in imports during 2016.

Detailed export and import data by year, country, coal type, and customs district is available through EIA’s Coal Data Browser.

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