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US coal groups welcome CO2 rule change: Update

  • Market: Coal, Electricity, Emissions
  • 21/08/18

Adds detail from EPA on expected coal capacity starting in the 10th paragraph

The US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) proposal today to replace the Clean Power Plan will help steady the coal industry, but more is needed, groups said.

The proposed rule would rely on on-site heat-rate improvements to cut CO2 emissions from coal-fired power plants, rather than the broader suite of measures, such as fuel switching and emissions trading, envisioned in the Clean Power Plan. It will give states up to three years to develop their own plans, quadruple the amount of time outlined in the previous rule, and modify standards for its New Source Review program to allow for an hourly emissions increase test.

The changes are largely in line with what members of the coal and electricity industries have identified as hurdles to upgrading aging, existing facilities. And they could protect a number of power plants from premature retirement once the rulemaking process is completed and litigation is resolved. This includes four of the five largest CO2 emitters in the US in 2016 according to EPA's database of facility level greenhouse gas emissions — the James H Miller, Scherer and Bowen plants, which Southern Company owns all or part of, as well as DTE's Monroe plant — none of which have near-term retirement plans.

"It certainly appears to be a step in the right direction," said Michelle Bloodworth, president of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity. "But it is also insufficient."

The administration and regional transmission operators need to follow through on plans to restructure wholesale electricity markets to better support coal generation, Bloodworth and others said. "If those are not addressed we are going to see more retirements."

Energy secretary Rick Perry has repeatedly pushed for measures to support fuel secure facilities in wholesale markets, including a proposal to use the so-called "section 202(c)" emergency authority and a 1950s-era defense law to help the plants compete against low-cost natural gas and renewables. The PJM Interconnection already is considering restructuring its capacity auction and in April said it will start to evaluate fuel security within its grid. PJM has also been ordered by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to find a way by the end of this summer to prevent state subsidies for renewable energy and nuclear power plants from affecting prices in the grid's annual auction.

Bloodworth and others did not immediately have an estimate for how many more plants would retire if market changes are not enacted. US generators have 38.8GW of coal-fired capacity scheduled to retire between this year and 2030, according to a database kept by Argus.

Those plants will likely go off line as expected even if the new rule is implemented as currently written.

"The retirements are mostly market driven," said Josiah Neeley, energy policy director for the R Street Institute, a research group based in Washington, DC. "The market is not pricing CO2 so the retirements are going to be driven probably not by emissions but by competition from natural gas and things like that."

EPA expects 600 units at 300 coal-fired power plants to be covered by the new rule. That is roughly 60pc of the existing US coal fleet when including power plants scheduled for retirement before 2025.

The agency is estimating coal will make up as much as 13pc more of the total US generation mix than it would if the Clean Power Plan were in place. Even so, actual coal capacity will be, at most, 3pc higher than it would have been under the Obama administration's rule.

The agency's models of three proposed heat rate improvement and cost scenarios had coal capacity in 2035 at 171GW-177GW, compared with 173GW if the Clean Power Plan were in place. The coal sector had 266.6GW of net summer capacity in place in 2016, EPA said.

But the changes would be enough to make coal production for electric power sector use as much as 10pc higher than it would be under the Clean Power Plan, the agency said. It estimated output could be as much as 465mn short tons (421.8mn metric tonnes) in 2035 under its proposals, compared with 424mn st if the previous plan were in place.

The proposed rule is "a fulfillment to the president's promises" to end the "war on coal," the White House said today.

The rule will help the industry avoid as much as $6.4bn in compliance costs that would have been incurred had the Clean Power Plan gone into effect, the agency said.

"We recognize that markets have changed and will continue to change," said Kirk Johnson, senior vice president for government relations of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. "But there would have been for us electric coops significant assets that would have been placed in a really negative situation" had the Clean Power Plan been enforced.

The proposed rule is a "more achievable" plan for electric cooperatives that could help prevent premature power plant closings, the group said.

Others in the industry agree, but market conditions will continue to be the driving factor.


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17/04/25

IMF anticipates lower growth from US tariffs

IMF anticipates lower growth from US tariffs

Washington, 17 April (Argus) — Economic growth projections set for release next week will include "notable markdowns" caused by higher US tariffs that have been disrupting trade and stressing financial markets, IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva said today. The IMF earlier this month warned that the tariffs that President Donald Trump was placing on trading partners could pose a "significant risk" to the global economy. Those higher trade barriers are on track to reduce growth, raise prices for consumers and create incremental costs related to uncertainty, the IMF plans to say in its World Economic Outlook on 22 April. "Our new growth projections will include notable markdowns, but not recession," Georgieva said Thursday in a speech previewing the outlook. "We will also see markups to the inflation forecasts for some countries." Trump has already placed an across-the-board 10pc tariff on most trading partners, with higher tariffs on some goods from Canada and Mexico, a 145pc tariff on China, and an exception for most energy imports. Those tariffs — combined with Trump's on-again, off-again threats to impose far higher tariffs — have been fueling uncertainty for businesses and trading partners. The recent tariff "increases, pauses, escalations and exemption" will likely have significant consequences for the global economy, Georgieva said, resulting in a postponement of investment decisions, ships at sea not knowing where to sail, precautionary savings and more volatile financial markets. Higher tariffs will cause an upfront hit to economic growth, she said, and could cause a shift in trade under which some sectors could be "flooded by cheap imports" while other sectors face shortages. The IMF has yet to release its latest growth projections. But in January, IMF expected global growth would hold steady at 3.3pc this year with lower inflation. The IMF at the time had forecast the US economy would grow by 2.7pc, with 1pc growth in Europe and 4.5pc growth in China. The upcoming markdown in growth projections from the IMF aligns with analyses from many banks and economists. US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell on 16 April said the recent increase in tariffs were likely to contribute to "higher inflation and slower growth". Those comments appear to have infuriated Trump, who has wanted Powell to cut interest rates in hopes of stimulating growth in the US. "Powell's termination cannot come fast enough!" Trump wrote today on social media. Powell's term as chair does not end until May 2026. Under a longstanding US Supreme Court case called Humphrey's Executor , Trump does not have the authority to unilaterally fire commissioners at independent agencies such as the Federal Reserve. Trump has already done so at other agencies such as the US Federal Trade Commission, creating a potential avenue to overturn the decision. By Chris Knight Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Japan to develop geothermal power under net zero plan


16/04/25
News
16/04/25

Japan to develop geothermal power under net zero plan

Osaka, 16 April (Argus) — The Japanese government is gearing up to develop geothermal energy, as the clean power can help to decarbonise the power sector with stable output, unlike weather-dependent renewables such as solar and wind. The trade and industry ministry Meti on 14 April launched a public-private council to discuss the development of next-generation geothermal energy, aiming to formulate a draft guideline, including capacity and cost targets, by around October this year. The new technology could lift the country's potential geothermal capacity to at least 77GW, compared with 23.5GW based on conventional methods, according to the council. The draft plan aims to establish the next-generation geothermal technology as early as the 2030s, to expand the use of the clean energy with competitive prices toward 2040, while tacking geological challenges, such as fault and complex geology, in Japan. Should the next-generation technology, such as closed-loop and supercritical geothermal, prove practical, Japan could utilise its potential, said Meti minister Yoji Muto on 15 April. Japan could consider exporting the next-generation technology globally, as it has around 70pc global share in conventional geothermal turbines, he added. The geothermal strategy is in line with the country's new strategic energy plan (SEP) , which was published in February, as well as prime minister Shigeru Ishiba's push to develop geothermal capacity. Ishiba had focused on less-utilised and high potential geothermal, as well as micro-hydropower, during his [campaign for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party presidential election](https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2608517) last year. The SEP assumes geothermal will account for 1-2pc of Japan's power mix in the April 2040-March 2041 fiscal year, which is relatively marginal compared with other renewables such as solar at 23-29pc, wind at 4-8pc, hydroelectric at 8-10pc and biomass at 5-6pc. But even the small share would be much higher compared with its actual share of 0.3pc of total power generation in 2023-24. Diversification of renewable power sources would be necessary to achieve Japan's plan to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 60pc in 2035-36 and by 73pc in 2040-41, respectively, against the 2013-14 level, before achieving its net zero goal in 2050. Under the SEP, Tokyo aims to reduce its dependence on thermal power to 30-40pc in 2040-41 from 71pc in 2024. Japanese private firms are already involved in further developing domestic and overseas geothermal projects. Japanese utility Hokkaido Electric Power and construction firm Obayashi said on 16 April that they will study potential geothermal resources in Hokkaido during April 2025-February 2026, taking advantage of subsidies provided by state-owned energy agency Jogmec. Japanese battery maker Panasonic Energy said on 8 April that it has signed a power purchase agreement with regional utility Kyushu Electric Power's renewable arm Kyushu Mirai Energy to secure around 50GWh/yr of geothermal-based electricity from 1 April. The stable geothermal supplies, unaffected by weather, could double a renewable ratio in its domestic power consumption to around 30pc, Panasonic said. By Motoko Hasegawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Australia's Fortescue announces electric drills deal


16/04/25
News
16/04/25

Australia's Fortescue announces electric drills deal

Sydney, 16 April (Argus) — Australian iron ore and energy company Fortescue has announced a A$350mn ($222mn) deal with Swedish firm Epiroc to buy over 50 electric drill rigs aimed at reducing emissions at its iron ore operations in Western Australia (WA). Fortescue expects the drills to reduce annual diesel consumption by around 35mn litres once it fully replaces diesel-powered equipment by 2030. The new fleet will cut more than 90,000t of CO2 emissions annually, Fortescue Metals chief executive officer Dino Otranto said on 16 April. The fleet includes autonomous electric platform and contour drills, and the first equipment arrived at Fortescue's Solomon mine in early April. The deal is part of the company's plan to replace its diesel-powered equipment by 2030. It signed a $2.8bn deal with Swiss-German manufacturer Liebherr in 2024 for a battery-powered truck fleet for its mining operations. Fortescue plans to replace around 800 pieces of heavy mining equipment with zero emissions equivalents and deploy 2-3GW of renewable energy and battery storage across the Pilbara region by the end of this decade, Otranto said. Fortescue is currently building a 190MW solar farm at its Cloudbreak mine, which will reduce annual diesel consumption by a further 125mn l. Safeguard mechanism results The company reported covered scope 1 emissions of 1.96mn t of CO2e across seven facilities in the first compliance year of Australia's reformed safeguard mechanism , which was just over 100,000t of CO2e above a combined baseline of 1.85mn t of CO2e. Facilities earn Safeguard Mechanism Credits (SMCs) under the scheme if their emissions are below baseline or must surrender Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs) or SMCs if emissions are above the threshold. Fortescue earned 49,749 SMCs for its Solomon Power Station and surrendered the units across four other facilities that exceeded their baselines. It also surrendered 57,753 ACCUs, while two of its facilities — the Christmas Creek Mine and Eliwana Mine — will have to manage a combined excess of 49,382t of CO2e in future under applications for multi-year monitoring periods (MYMP), which allow eligible facilities to report under the safeguard scheme for periods of up to five years ( see table ). Fortescue expected to exceed emissions baselines by around 120,000t of CO2e in the 2023-24 year, it said in 2024. ACCU generic, generic (No AD) and human-induced regeneration (HIR) spot prices have remained below A$35 ($22) over the past two months, having declined steadily from mid-November because of lower buying interest from safeguard companies and strong SMC issuances. By Juan Weik and Susannah Cornford Fortescue's 2023-24 safeguard mechanism results t CO2e Facility Covered emissions Baseline ACCUs surrendered SMCs surrendered SMCs issued MYMP net position Solomon Mine 452,137 390,033 42,926 19,178 Solomon Power Station 316,859 366,608 49,749 Christmas Creek Mine 372,251 351,986 20,265 Cloudbreak Mine 295,132 267,459 8,411 19,262 Rail 254,871 241,706 4,002 9,163 Eliwana Mine 164,894 135,777 29,117 Iron Bridge Mine 104,560 100,000 2,414 2,146 Total 1,960,704 1,853,569 57,753 49,749 49,749 49,382 Source: Clean Energy Regulator Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Dozens of US coal plants eligible for MATS extension


15/04/25
News
15/04/25

Dozens of US coal plants eligible for MATS extension

Cheyenne, 15 April (Argus) — The White House has identified more than 60 fossil fuel-fired power plants that will have two extra years to comply with the more stringent mercury and air toxics standards (MATS) finalized in 2024. Under a proclamation signed by US president Donald Trump last week, the plants on the list will be able to operate under whatever existing mercury and air toxics standards they currently are subject to until 8 July 2029. That is two years after the compliance deadline put in place in May 2024. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rules finalized last year tightened mercury and air toxics standards for coal- and oil-fired units by 67pc, included new emissions-monitoring requirements and added standards for lignite-fired coal plants that put them in line with those for other coal plants. EPA in March said it was reviewing the new standards and said companies could seek exemptions to the mercury rule and other emissions rules. Trump followed that up last week with a proclamation that certain generating facilities would be given a two-year exemption in complying with the 2024 rule. The White House released the list of exempt power plants late on 14 April. Most of the plants on the list are coal-fired generators, some of which were scheduled for retirement by the end of 2027. These include Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston plant and one unit of its Cumberland plant, as well as Vistra Energy's Kincaid, Baldwin and Newton plants and two coal units of Vistra's Miami Fort plant. The two coal units at Southern Company's Victor J Daniel plant in Mississippi also have been exempted from the new mercury and air toxics rules for two years. Southern had planned on retiring those units by the end of 2027, but in February, the Mississippi Public Service Commission approved two special contracts that were expected to need unit 2 of the Daniel plant and possibly a unit of a natural gas plant to run into the 2030s. Some other coal plant units owned by Southern, TVA and Vistra also are now exempt from the July 2027 mercury and air toxics compliance deadline. So are some plant units owned by East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC), NRG, Ameren and Entergy. At least two natural gas plant units — unit 5 of Southern's Plant Barry and City Utilities of Springfield's John Twitty Energy Center, which has coal and natural gas generation — are exempt from the July 2027 deadline. So is unit 5 of Entergy's RS Nelson plant, which runs on petroleum coke. Essentially all of the other units in the White House's list are coal units, including Otter Tail Power's Big Stone and Coyote Station plants in North Dakota. Otter Tail said it had requested the exemptions "to avoid making unnecessary expenditures" if EPA decides to roll back the 2024 rule. EKPC said it was "grateful" its request to exempt the Spurlock and Cooper coal-fired power plants in Kentucky was granted and that the company "will continue to operate the plants in accordance with all market and environmental rules." NRG said it was still reviewing the order, but did not expect it to have any effect on its plans. TVA, Southern, Vistra and owners of other power plants given compliance extensions did not respond to requests for comment. By Courtney Schlisserman Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Australian coal methane emissions under-reported: Ember


15/04/25
News
15/04/25

Australian coal methane emissions under-reported: Ember

London, 15 April (Argus) — Australian coal miners emitted 40pc more methane in 2020 than they reported, energy think-tank Ember said in a review of satellite data released today. The organisation, along with energy intelligence company Kayrros, analysed methane emissions from four mining "clusters" in Queensland in 2020, which account for roughly three fourths of the state's thermal coal and almost all of its coking coal production. The investigators found "a total of 1.42 ± 0.19 million tonnes of methane released from coal mines" in that year. Miners in the state reported 1.01mnt of methane emissions during the same period. The difference between reported and actual emissions was much larger in New South Wales, Ember said. "While the state reported 379,000t of methane in 2020, our satellite study identified 721,000t of methane that year, while only accounting for approximately 61pc of the state's coal production," the organisation said. If all coal mines in New South Wales followed the same trend, this would suggest total methane emissions of 1.2mn t, more than three times the figure producers reported to the government. Ember are not the only organisation criticising Australia's official numbers. Climate Trace and Open Methane, two organisations monitoring greenhouse gas emissions by satellite, suggest that Australian coal miners are only reporting half of their methane emissions. Academics supported by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), writing in the American Chemical Society, published an article this year saying that trading company Glencore's Hail Creek mine was emitting four to five times more methane than it reported. Glencore sharply criticised the Hail Creek report, saying the study's aerial surveys lacked credibility because they were based on very limited samples and did not consider "inherent mining variability." The firm said that the report "failed to detect methane emissions" that it had reported itself. The producer, one of the country's largest, has repeatedly criticised satellite measures of methane emissions. The method, the firm said in a 2022 statement, is vulnerable to "atmospheric contaminants such as dust, water vapour or smoke" and cannot reliably detect the amount of greenhouse gases coming from mines. The Australian government launched a review of their methane reporting last year in light of the new satellite techniques used by researchers. The UK and EU are both planning a carbon tax on imported goods called the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) in the next two years. If either government were to accept Ember's figures, they could theoretically raise taxes on imported steel made with Australian coking coal. Neither government plans on taxing coal imports directly under CBAM. By Austin Barnes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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