EIA: US coal shipments declined 8% in 2023 as coal consumption fell sharply
Published by Will Owen,
Editor
World Coal,
According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), the amount of coal transported in the US decreased by 8% in 2023, continuing a trend in which coal shipments have generally decreased over the past two decades as coal’s share of power generation has declined in the US. The amount of coal transported to power plants, which are often located far from mines, decreased by more than half, falling from 957 million t in 2010 to 422 million t in 2023.
The EIA expects the decline in coal consumption to reverse this year. In its recently published July update to the Short-Term Energy Outlook, the EIA forecasts an increase in use of coal to generate electricity in the US in 2024, with use dropping back to around 2023 level in 2025.
Although the amount of coal being transported closely follows the coal consumption rate, the two measurements can differ from year to year. During 2023, US coal producers shipped 35 million t (9%) more than US power plants consumed. Surplus deliveries last year boosted inventory levels at power plants by 48%, reducing deliveries in early 2024. Conversely, coal shipments to power plants in 2021 and 2022 were 59 million t less than the amounts consumed during those two years, and inventories dropped to less than 100 million t.
Railroads dominate coal transportation
Four major modes of transportation move coal from the mines to power plants. Railroads transported nearly three-quarters of all US coal in 2023. Because many coal-fired power plants are far from the coal fields and mines, railroads have proven to be the most efficient transportation mode given the extensive rail network across the country. US coal is also transported by barges that operate on the inland river system, trucks, or conveyer belts in much smaller quantities.
Some coal is transported by two modes, first shipped by railroad and then loaded into a barge, ship, or truck for final delivery. In 2023, 9% of railroad shipments also used a secondary mode of transportation to reach the destination, such as ships on the Great Lakes, barge, truck, or conveyor belt.
To read more from the EIA, click here.
Read the article online at: https://www.worldcoal.com/coal/18072024/eia-us-coal-shipments-declined-8-in-2023-as-coal-consumption-fell-sharply/
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