Viewpoint: US steam coal exports shift to Europe
30 Dec 2022
Europe may
continue to dominate US thermal coal exports in 2023, as EU countries continue
to block Russian coal and Moscow's drastic cuts to natural gas supply keep gas
prices elevated.
But
demand for high-sulfur coal may wane.
Europe
passed Asia as the primary destination for US steam coal exports in August for
the first time since November 2018. And it held that top spot the following two
months, the latest US Commerce Department data show. By the end of October, US
steam coal exports to Europe on a year-to-date basis had climbed to a four-year
high of 10.4mn short tons (9.45mn metric tonnes), while volumes to Asia dropped
by more than 6mn st to 13mn st.
The
shift in US thermal coal exports in 2022 came as Europe continued to recovery
from the Covid-19-induced downturn, a colder-than-normal winter and then
Russia's February invasion of Ukraine. Higher natural gas prices also boosted
coal-fired generation in Europe, while supply disruptions in other countries
bolstered delivered coal prices, making the continent a more attractive
destination for coal sellers.
At
the same time, some other countries' appetite for US steam coal faltered, as
prices rose and buyers in a number of those countries were able to take
lower-priced Russian or Indonesian coal. Petroleum coke also held a competitive
advantage over steam coal for cement makers.
Europe
likely continued to be the top destination for US thermal coal in November and
December. That could result in US volumes to Europe for all of 2022 being just
shy of shipments to Asia.
For
2023 "all things unchanged, I think there will be good flow of US exports
to Europe," one market participant said. He estimated it will be a mix of
shipments that were put under contract in 2022 and new deals.
But
the export picture is not entirely rosy. Prices have fallen from the records
set in the middle of 2022, which could deter some US producers.
Also,
while demand for low-sulfur coal could continue to be elevated in 2023,
interest in US high-sulfur coal faces challenges in Europe. Generators on the
continent historically have blended high-sulfur coal with Russian supply to
bring sulfur levels down. While other countries serving European markets also
have lower-sulfur coal, it tends to have a higher sulfur content than Russian
supply, which has not been allowed to enter EU countries since 10 August. To
keep sulfur content and emissions steady, generators that blend coal likely
have decreased the amount of high-sulfur coal in the mix to 25pc from the
typical 35pc as they ran out of Russian supply, one market participant
estimated.
Low
water levels also slowed coal shipments from terminals in
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) and a relatively mild autumn and start to
winter limited coal consumption. Now, "there is ample supply of
high-sulfur coal in Europe," a utility buyer said.
In
October, US exports out of New Orleans — which typically are mid- to
high-sulfur Illinois basin coal — to Europe fell from year-earlier levels for
the only the second time in 2022 and were the lowest since December 2021.
Still, January-October shipments from the port district to Europe were at a
four-year high of 5.7mn st.
Thermal coal exports out of Baltimore, Maryland,
to Europe for the first 10 months of 2022 quadrupled to 2.22mn st, which is the
most since at least 2012, as buyers in India reduced Northern Appalachian coal
purchases.