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Looming power-plant retirements to put coal traffic back into decline over next five years

 Wolfe Research analysis projects record decline in coal-fired power generation


A Union Pacific coal train grinds its way up Logan Hill in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming in October 2020. (Bill Stephens)

NEW YORK – Coal is enjoying a day in the sun amid low stockpiles at power plants and high natural gas prices.

Overall railroad coal volumes have improved since the second quarter of 2021 and the trend is expected to continue into next year.

But then a wave of coal-fired power plant retirements will put coal volumes back into their long-term downward trend, according to an analysis by Wolfe Research. “Headwinds from coal plant retirements will accelerate in 2025 and into the latter part of the decade, although near-term fundamentals for coal remain positive,” analyst Scott Group wrote in a note to clients last week.

Some 23% of current coal-fired electricity generation capacity is expected to be retired over the next five years, according to Wolfe’s review of 70 power-plant retirement dates that utilities have already announced. The 48-gigawatt reduction in coal-fired electricity generation will be offset by a record 128-gigawatt expansion of natural gas, solar, and wind power over the next five years, Wolfe says.

The result will be a 12.1% decline in Class I railroad coal volumes through 2026, Wolfe projects.

Wolfe took the power plant shutdown data and married it with the sources of their coal and what railroad or railroads deliver the coal. Nearly three quarters of the plants scheduled to shut down in the next five years burn coal from the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and Montana, with retirements concentrated in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.

Based on this data, over the next five years Union Pacific stands to lose the highest percentage of its coal volume (16%), followed by BNSF Railway (14.5%), CSX Transportation (11.8%), Canadian Pacific (10.5%), Norfolk Southern (5.5%), and Canadian National (1.1%).

Coal generates about 11% of railroad revenue today, Wolfe says, down from 23% in the peak year of 2011.

 

 

 

 

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