Growth in global coal demand to slow over next five years – IEA

coal demand
The biggest growth in coal demand is expected to occur in India, which is anticipating an annual average growth rate of five per cent by 2021. The Hindu photo.

China coal demand “in structural and slow decline”: IEA

By Nina Chestney

LONDON, Dec 12 (Reuters) – Growth in global coal demand will slow over the next five years due to lower consumption in China and the United States and as renewable energy sources gain ground, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Monday.

The IEA said last year that the world’s top coal consumer, China, could be facing peak coal demand for the first time due to measures to cap coal use to tackle air pollution and curb excess supply.

“In China, coal demand is in structural and slow decline driven by a new economic growth model and diversification of coal,” the Paris-based IEA said in its medium-term coal market report.

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Even though China’s consumption is likely to have peaked, the country will still be the largest coal user over the next five years.

Its coal demand should decrease slightly to 2.816 billion tonnes of coal equivalent by 2021, compared to 2.896 billion tonnes of coal equivalent in 2014.

Globally, the IEA expects coal demand to total 5.636 billion tonnes by 2021, compared to 5.400 billion tonnes last year, when coal demand dropped for the first time this century.

This equates to 0.6 per cent average annual growth from 2015 to 2021, below the 2.5 per cent average yearly growth over the past decade.

“Because of the implications for air quality and carbon emissions, coal has come under fire in recent years, but it is too early to say that this is the end for coal,” said Keisuke Sadamori, director of the IEA’s energy markets and security directorate.

“Coal demand is moving to Asia, where emerging economies with growing populations are seeking affordable and secure energy sources to power their economies.”

The biggest growth in coal demand will occur in India, which will have an annual average growth rate of 5 per cent by 2021.

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After years of decline, coal prices have rebounded sharply in 2016, driven by a sharp cut in Chinese coal output coupled with strong demand across the Asia-Pacific region and in Europe.

Benchmark API2 2017 coal futures rose by 4 per cent to $65.75 a tonne on Monday morning, the highest level since Dec. 2.

In its report, the IEA forecasts thermal coal prices to decline next year and then remain relatively flat to 2021.

“Reasonable doubts persist on the sustainability of current prices, given that climate pressure continues and air pollution is a serious issue which will shape policies in China, India and other emerging countries,” it said.

Coal demand in the United States and Europe will continue to decline, falling to 475 million tonnes and 337 million tonnes respectively in 2021.

U.S. president-elect Donald Trump has said he wants to boost the U.S. coal, oil and shale industries. However, there is scepticism that coal will see a prolonged revival once Trump takes office because demand from the power sector has been declining since the emergence of shale gas in 2005.

(Editing by Dale Hudson and Louise Heavens)

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