The Window is Closing on Coal…According to Goldman Sachs!

August 14, 2013

NOTE: Images in this archived article have been removed.

Image RemovedIf you live in Whatcom County, you’ve probably heard the recent news about Gateway Pacific Terminal – the proposed coal port at Cherry Point. First we heard that the state Environmental impact Statement will included the broad level of scoping that opponents of the port have asked for, including the end-use impacts of burning the coal in China. Next we heard that the Lummi Nation has sent an official letter stating its unequivocal opposition to the terminal. According to the Bellingham Herald’s John Stark, this in itself “could stop the federal permit process for the coal terminal dead in its tracks.” Treaty rights have the power of federal law, and the Corps of Engineers recognize this: “If the Lummis come to that position, it will make us reassess the direction we are going,” [Army Corps of Engineers regulatory branch chief Muffy] Walker said. “We have denied permits in the past, based on tribal concerns.”

And then there was the announcement that SSA Marine is paying $1.65 million to settle a lawsuit over land clearing that was done on the site without permits, in violation of the federal Clean Water Act.

So things are not looking so great at the moment for SSA Marine, the corporation wanting to build the port. To make matters worse – to add insult to injury – Goldman Sachs itself seems to be “piling on.” This is especially significant, because it is estimated that Goldman Sachs owns about a 49% to 51% share of SSA Marine, and is the source of capital for their infrastructure investments!

On July 24, Goldman Sachs issued a commodities report titled “The Window for Thermal Coal investment is Closing.” They are seeing a sharp decline in overseas demand and are projecting significant price declines through 2017. For the longer term they see a peak in seaborne demand by 2020, with a gradual erosion of coal’s “current position atop the fuel mix for global power generation.”

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Goldman Sachs Headquarters, New York City (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

They are seeing the following trends:

1) environmental regulations that discourage coal-fired generation, 2) strong competition from gas and renewable energy and 3) improvements in energy efficiency.
 
In contrast to the shortages seen in China when the coal terminal was proposed in 2011, the outlook has transformed in a short period of time and China is now seen to be over-supplied. The Goldman Sachs report is projecting that for the duration of their forecast period, both prices and demand for seaborne coal will remain low. Therefore they expect import levels into China to decline over the coming years.
This cannot be good news for the proposed largest coal exporting terminal in North America!

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On page 14 of the report, a clear statement is made relative to the proposed terminal at Cherry Point:

Demand will be unable to absorb the entire project pipeline
Thermal coal is not constrained by a lack of geological resources; proven reserves of 861Gt are equivalent to over 100 years of consumption at current rates. The portfolio of growth options for thermal coal exports is correspondingly large.
 
In particular, there are several large scale projects where investment in rail and port infrastructure could unlock large basins that have either remained undeveloped or cut off from the export market [Exhibit 21 shows a map transporting coal from Powder River Basin from WA state to China]. The increase in seaborne supply from any of these basins would be in a range between 30Mtpa and 100Mtpa in order to optimize the large capital investment in infrastructure, in our view.
 
In the period 2008-12 when Chinese seaborne demand was increasing at an average rate of 32Mt per year, the market could have absorbed the staged development of new coal basins. However, in an environment of slowing growth, large scale projects can push the market into oversupply once they are added to the range of brownfield expansions. [emphasis mine]
I would challenge the statement that there are unconstrained resources. As Richard Heinberg has stated, “…as a tool for forecasting future supplies of nonrenewable resources such as coal or oil, the R/P [reserves to production] ratio is utterly worthless.” [Blackout: Coal, Climate and the Last Energy Crisis]. However, the point here is that regardless of supply, the limit on production is currently seen to be demand reduction.
 
Clearly, this report is telling us that the proposed coal port at Cherry Point does not make economic sense even to the analysts employed by the majority (or near majority) owner of SSA Marine. Timing is crucial, they say. Projects ready to go now (“year 0″) just might turn a profit. Projects that need 5 years to secure permits, complete construction will likely not be profitable.

Bottom line:

The prospect of weaker demand growth (we believe seaborne demand could peak in 2020) and seaborne prices near marginal production costs suggest that most thermal coal growth projects will struggle to earn a positive return for their owners.
Sorry SSA Marine! Things aren’t looking so good right now.

Hat tip to Rick F. and Gary K. for alerting me to this report!

David MacLeod

I live in Washington state and consider myself a social permaculturist (exploring “invisible structures”), and am involved with the Transition Initiative movement as a co-initiator of Transition Whatcom.  Transition Training in 2008 from the original UK Trainers Sophy Banks and Naresh Giangrande, and Permaculture Design Certificate earned at Inspiration Farm (where I lived for about a year and a half), 2009.  Introduction to Integral and Integral Sustainability from Alan Seid, of Cascadia Workshops. I have a particular interest in what I call Integral Permaculture, as well as PatternDynamics (TM) (informed by both Integral theory and Permaculture). In January of 2014 I became the first person in the PatternDynamics Community of Practice to receive Level II (b) Accreditation, certifying me as a facilitator of the PatternDynamics workshop. Also known to be a “peak oil activist,” I am an occasional contributor to Resilience.org (formerly Energy Bulletin), and have been a panelist at Seattle’s Green Fest.

Tags: American coal exports, coal production