Tag Archives: Consol Energy

Will Obama Put Coal out of Business?

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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In 2008, candidate Barack Obama infamously said that as president he would set policy that would bankrupt the coal industry: “So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can; it’s just that it will bankrupt them because they’re going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that’s being emitted.”

The coming collapse
Now, according to a new Duke University study, pending regulations by President Obama’s Environmental Protection Agency may just accomplish that goal. It concluded that tougher air-quality standards would make two-thirds of the nation’s coal-fired power plants more expensive to operate than comparable natural-gas-fired facilities. And if the price of natural gas soared four times higher than what it currently trades for, the costs of operation between the two systems would simply be comparable.

The coal industry is already in an untenable situation as utilities shut down coal-fired plants. The Energy Information Administration says over the last year alone, the net generation of energy by coal producers fell 12% while natural gas soared 21%. During President Obama‘s tenure, coal generation has fallen by 25% while gas is up 39%.

Of course, not all the blame can be laid at the door of the Oval Office as greater shale production through new and innovative drilling techniques, like horizontal drilling, have caused gas prices to tumble during that time period. That alone has made it a resource that is more competitive with coal even as the older, inefficient plants continued to be taken off line.

Padlocking the front gate
Yet it can’t be denied that the demise of many plants has been hastened by the animus against the coal industry. In 2012 alone, Duke Energy retired eight coal plants representing 730 megawatts of capacity and Dominion took down nine, eliminating 1.1 gigawatts of capacity. FirstEnergy idled three for 500 megawatts. SourceWatch says two dozen plants will be retired in 2013 representing 2.9 gigawatts of capacity with nearly 50 plants expected to close next year totaling seven gigawatts of capacity. 

That’s odd because the researchers found that only 9% of coal-fired plants today are more costly to operate than natural-gas-fired ones. Something’s moving against coal and it’s clear the new EPA regulations will dramatically tilt the scales in favor of gas. This is despite emissions dropping steadily over the years to their lowest levels since 1992.

Yet as the university study concluded, reductions in emissions in the U.S. will likely be exceeded elsewhere in the world because China is still forging ahead. As Obama noted in his first campaign, China is building a new coal-fired plant a day, which may be the only thing that saves the industry.

Peabody Energy  realizes 25% of its revenues from Asia (up from 18% the year before) while earlier this year Consol Energy completed the largest shipment ever of metallurgical coal to China.

Deep, dark hole
With coal consumption and production in the U.S. on the decline, miners are abandoning the industry en masse. Rio …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

2 of Yesterday's Big Disappointments

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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The old investing maxim “sell in May and go away” means we’re quickly approaching the time when the incredible run of the Dow Jones Industrial Average over the past three months will be coming to a close. Yesterday’s five-point loss could be the signal that the market is topping here, and with Europe doing all it can to stop the spread of a financial contagion after its bailout of Cyprus, there seems little reason to believe this bull market will continue much longer.

Yesterday’s big loser was Hewlett-Packard, the first quarter’s big winner, though after a 68% gain over the past three months, a small 2% loss is no big deal. But the landscape for computers hasn’t changed, so now comes the point where the turnaround has to gain traction on its own. I’m not so certain it will, though a broad overview of the markets suggests there are still worse places to be standing right now.

Canary in the coal mine
Coal miner Walter Energy took it on the chin (again) yesterday, falling 8% as the ISM manufacturing index posted its biggest miss to expectations in a year, coming in at 51.3 compared with forecasts of 54.0. The bigger worry, however, is new orders falling all the way down to 51.4 from 57.8, which, coupled with a pullback in China‘s economy, diminishes the prospects for renewed industrial demand and, in turn, greater coal demand. Arch CoalPeabody Energy , and Consol Energy all tumbled 3% or more yesterday.

Analysts see a particularly tough year ahead for Walter because of the weak pricing environment. It has significant cash obligations coming due this year, with Wall Street looking askance at the $150 million or so in interest payments and total cash obligations of $365 million, both of which combine to put it between a financial rock and a hard place. 

It faces outside pressure as well from shareholders agitating for change. Hedge-fund operator SAC Capital Partners recently reported a new 5% stake in the miner, while Audley Capital has publicly expressed doubts about management’s capabilities to turn the company around and wants to oust some directors in favor of its own five-man slate.

As coal miners remain under the gun, there appear to be few catalysts in front of Walter to change its downward trajectory.

Wearing the dunce cap
For-profit educators got schooled yesterday as well, with ITT Educational Services falling almost 9%, Grand Canyon Education dropping 5%, and Corinthian Colleges and Career Education both falling about 3% on the day. The one bright spot was Apollo Group , which rose about 1.5% and is up more than 3% since reporting better-than-expected earnings last week.

Yet even in beating Wall Street forecasts, Apollo showed what the problems are facing the sector: falling revenues, higher expenses, and dwindling student enrollments. When ITT reported fourth-quarter earnings in January, it saw all of those same factors, but it didn’t have the luxury of beating expectations. First-quarter results …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Consol Energy Ready to Re-Enter Blacksville Mine

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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After evacuating its Blacksville No. 2 mine near Wayne Township in Greene County, Pa., on March 12 following a report of smoke in the Orndoff shaft, Consol Energy announced yesterday that its plan to re-enter the mine has been approved by state, federal, and union officials.

Re-entry is scheduled to begin Wednesday at 7 a.m. if all atmospheric monitoring continues to indicate it is safe to do so. Blacksville No. 2 Mine produces approximately 400,000 tons of coal per month.

After identifying the general location of the fire that caused the smoke, all 121 underground employees were safely evacuated through the mine’s Kuhntown portal. Consol’s steps to contain and extinguish the fire included pumping water into the mine to complete a water seal and pumping in eight “isolation walls” to cut off oxygen.

The process was completed March 24 and analysis of continuous mine atmosphere readings indicates that gas levels remain steady and oxygen levels continue to decrease, Consol said. As a result, Consol believes the fire has been successfully extinguished.

Consol’s senior vice president Chuck Shaynak said, “I am extremely proud of the successful collaborative effort from federal and state agencies, the UMWA, contractors, vendors, and our employees on site who worked around-the-clock to remotely extinguish a fire in less than twelve days. Without their efforts, we would not be where we are today. Most importantly, we accomplished all of the work without an injury.”

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The article Consol Energy Ready to Re-Enter Blacksville Mine originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Rich Duprey has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance