Profits for selling coal-fired generation into US power markets are near historic highs as much of the middle of the country continues to contend with winter storms and low temperatures.
But any benefit to consumption may be limited in some areas by power disruptions.
Day-ahead coal spark spreads have topped natural gas across the US since 11 February as freezing temperatures in the middle of the US boosted power demand and prices and started to impinge on some natural gas production. Natural gas prices jumped as well, further tipping power markets to coal's favor.
In the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which has borne the brunt of the weather-induced disruptions, the day-ahead spark spread for 10,000 Btu/kWh coal units reached a record $8,774.63/MWh yesterday as the power price jumped.
Buyers for two generators with coal plants in Texas said yesterday they were running most of their coal plants at full capacity. One of the buyers said coal inventories at his company's plants were dwindling quickly, but he did not say whether he would be entering coal spot markets to replenish supply.
Coal power in the state overall may have been constrained so far this week by forced power outages. ERCOT ordered transmission operators on 14 February to pull about 34,000MW of capacity. The grid operator said today that it continues to work to restore power to customers, but it is dependent on generator availability and progress has been uneven.
The grid operator ordered local utilities at 9am CT today to shed 14,000MW of load, countering the 3,500MW restored last night, as a power emergency in the Midwest cut the generation ERCOT could import. Since the start of this week, 46,000MW of power has been forced off of ERCOT's systems. Thermal generation has accounted for 60pc of the cuts.
More challenges are ahead this week. The National Weather Service is forecasting freezing rain and storms from the southeast through Texas today, and for snowstorms that have blanketed parts of the western US and Midwest to move east tomorrow.
The Southwest Power Pool today extended its level 2 emergency alert, directing utilities to continue to urge customers to conserve electricity. The Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) also has an alert in place for its southern region.
Coal-fired generation in those grids reached their highest levels since 2018 on 13 and 14 February and has dipped in recent days. Natural gas generation in those grids also was elevated relative to recent weeks, but lagged coal-fired generation.
The day-ahead spark spread for 10,000 Btu/kWh coal units at the Palo Verde power hub in the southwest reached $274.83/MWh yesterday, its highest level since September. The spread for 8,000 Btu/kWh natural gas units was -$539.81/MWh.
In MISO, the day-ahead coal spark spread at the Indiana hub climbed to a record $373.65/MWh on 12 February and was around $17/MWh lower yesterday, while the spread for natural gas was -$695.09/MWh at the end of last week and $201.46/MWh yesterday.
Coal spark spreads in the PJM Interconnection and the Southern Company operating territory have also been well-above natural gas. In PJM West, the day-ahead coal spread was $133.17/MWh yesterday, the most since January 2018, while gas was $85.18/MWh.
Coal generation in PJM passed natural gas for the first time in two years on 12 February, when it totaled 907,109MW, and rose over the weekend to 965,863MW on 15 February, while natural gas fell to 848,236MW from 891,378MW over the same period. Coal power in the grid, the US' largest electric grid, still held a roughly 10pc lead over natural gas yesterday, when it totaled 914,894MW to gas' 834,757MW. And real-time grid data had coal continuing to hold a lead over natural gas so far today.
But the gains could be short-lived. Peak month and season natural gas spark spreads at key power hubs are higher than coal spark spreads.