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Peak coal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peak consumption or production of coal

Part ofa series on
Coal

Use ofcoal is expected to peak in 2025.[1] Historically, it was widely believed that the supply-side would eventually drive peak coal due to the depletion ofcoal reserves. However, since the increasing global efforts to limitclimate change, peak coal has been driven by demand.[2] This is due in large part to the rapid expansion of natural gas and renewable energy.[2] As of 2024 over 40% of all energy sectorcarbon dioxide emissions are from coal, and many countries have pledged tophase-out coal.[3]

The peak of coal's share in the globalenergy mix was in 2008, when coal accounted for 30% of global energy production.[2] Coal consumption is declining in the United States and Europe, as well as developed economies in Asia.[2] However production increased inIndia,Indonesia andChina, which offset the falls in other regions.[4] Global coal consumption reached an all time high in 2023 at 8.5 billion tons,[5] but is expected to reach a new record of 8.77 billion tons in 2024.[6]

In 2024 theInternational Energy Agency said: “After having grown by more than 1.2 billion tonnes since 2020, global coal demand is set to plateau in the next three years, reaching around 8.87 billion tonnes by 2027. Given the slow progress of deploying carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) technologies in the sector, carbon dioxide emissions from coal are not expected to decline in that period, based on today’s policy settings and market trends. While coal demand in advanced economies continues to shrink, this decline is expected to be offset by growth in a few emerging and developing economies, such as India, Indonesia and Viet Nam, where the additional energy demand associated with economic growth is set to be met with a variety of sources, including coal. Despite increasing renewable electricity generation, India is expected to see the largest increase in coal use in the coming years, driven by consumption from the power sector and industry. Still, as has been the case for 25 years, China, which consumes 30% more coal than the rest of the world put together, will continue to define global trends.”[7]

Peak coal demand

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World annual coal consumption 1980–2019
Consumption trends in the top five coal-consuming countries 1980–2019

Although reserves of coal remain abundant, consumption of coal has declined in many countries. In 2016, Scotland closed its last coal-fired power plant,[8] accommodated by an increase in nuclear power generation (to 42.8% of 2016 output). Scottish renewable energy comprised 42.9% of 2016 output.[9] The term "peak coal" is now used primarily to refer to a peak and subsequent decline in global and national coal consumption. In 2016 experts estimated that China, the world's largest coal consumer, reached peak coal in 2013, and that the world may have passed peak coal.[10] However, in 2017, for the first time in four years, demand for coal rose.[11]

As perCoal 2024 – IEA’s annual coal market report, global coal use has rebounded strongly after plummeting at the height of the pandemic. It is poised to rise to 8.77 billion tonnes in 2024, a record. According to the report, demand is set to stay close to this level through 2027.[12]

As of 2015, China accounted for 50.0 percent of world coal consumption. Chinese coal consumption fell in 2014 and 2015. The last previous decline in Chinese coal consumption had been in 1997 and 1998. While consumption in China and the United States declined in 2015, that of India continued to rise and, in 2015, India surpassed the United States and became the world's second-largest consumer of coal.[13]

Peak coal production for individual nations

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Coal production trends 1980–2019 in the top five coal-producing countries (US EIA)

As of 2018, the top coal-extracting countries were China (46.0%), India (9.5%), US (8.6%), Indonesia (6.8%), Australia (6.1%)

China

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(November 2020)
See also:Coal in China

China is the largest consumer and mines the most out of thecountries that produce coal. In 2019 the IEA predicted that coal use would plateau in 2022,[14] whereasUBS bank forecasts 2023.[15] In 2020 China set acarbon neutral target date.[16][17] In 2021, the government ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity at all times, including holidays; approved new mines, and eliminated restrictions on coal imports.[18]

As of 2020, over half of the world's coal-generated electricity was produced in China.[19]

India

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(November 2020)
See also:Coal in India

In 2018 India was the world's second largest coal producer. Partly due to the fall in cost of LPG and renewables peak consumption is forecast for the 2020s,[20] or 2030.[21]

United States

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See also:Coal in the United States
US coal production had major tonnage peaks in 1918, 1947, and 2008.
United States annual mined coal tonnage (black) and BTU content (red), 1980–2012, from US EIA

Although Hubbert's analysis in 1956 projected total extraction to peak in about 2150,[22] records show that extraction reached an energy peak in 1998 and a tonnage peak in 2008.[23]

Coal mass

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US coal extraction peaked duringWorld War I, then declined sharply during the depression years of the 1930s. Coal extraction peaked again in the 1940s, then declined during the 1950s.[22] Then coal extraction revived, and was on a nearly continual increasing trend from 1962 to 2008, exceeding the previous peaks. Extraction in 2008 was a record 1.17 billion short tons.[24] High-BTUanthracite coal peaked in 1914;[22] and declined from 44 million tons in 1950 to 1.6 million tons in 2007.Bituminous coal extraction has also been declining since 1990. The gap has been taken up by large increases in subbituminous coal extraction.[24] Comprehensive analysis of historical trends in US coal extraction and reserve estimates, along with a possible future outlook, was published in scientific journals on coal geology in 2009.[25]

In 1956, Hubbert estimated that US coal extraction would peak in about the year 2150.[22] In 2004, Gregson Vaux used the Hubbert model to predict peak US coal extraction in 2032.[26] In 2014, a model published in theInternational Journal of Coal Geology forecast a U.S. raw tonnage peak from between 2009 and 2023, with the most likely year of the peak in 2010.[27]

Energetic peak

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Over the years, the average energy content per ton of coal mined in the US has declined as mining shifts to coals of lower rank. Although the tonnage of coal mined in the United States reached its latest peak in 2008, the peak in terms of coal energy content occurred in 1998, at 598Millions of metric tons of oil equivalent (Mtoe); by 2005 this had fallen to 576 Mtoe, or about 4% lower.[28][29]

Australia

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See also:Coal in Australia

Australia has substantial coal resources, mostlybrown coal. It is responsible for almost 40% of global coal exports worldwide, and much of its current electricity is generated fromcoal-fired power stations. There are tentative plans to very slowly phase out coal electricity generation in favor ofgas, although these plans are still a topic of much debate in Australian politics. Groups such as theAustralian Greens, suggest that coal be left in the ground to avoid its potential combustion either in Australia or in importer nations.

Because most of the country's coal is exported it is vulnerable to reductions by importing countries such as China.[30]

Indonesia

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See also:Energy in Indonesia
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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(July 2020)

Indonesia is the world's biggest thermal coal exporter.[31]

Government policy is unclear.[32]

Turkey

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See also:Coal in Turkey

Production peaked in 2018 at just over 100 million tonnes.[33]

United Kingdom

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Further information:Coal in the United Kingdom

Coal output peaked in 1913 in Britain at 287 Mt and now accounts for less than one percent of world coal extraction. 2007 extraction was around 15 Mt.[34]In 2024 the United Kingdom stopped using coal to generate electricity and the last coal-fired power station was shut down.[35]

Canada

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According to the Earth Watch Group,Canadian coal extraction peaked in 1997.[28]

Germany

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Germany hit peak hard coal extraction in 1958 at 150 million tons. In 2005,hard coal extraction was around 25 million tons.[28]Total coal extraction peaked in 1985 at 578 million short tons, declined sharply in the early 1990s following German reunification, and has been nearly steady since 1999. Total coal extraction in 2005 was 229 million short tons, four percent of total world extraction.[36]

World peak coal

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World coal production in tonnage (black) and BTU content (red), 1980–2011; data from US EIA

2011 Patzek and Croft

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In 2010, Tadeusz Patzek (chairman of the Department of Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin) and Greg Croft, predicted that coal production would peak in 2011 or shortly thereafter, and decline so quickly as to nearly eliminate the contribution of coal to climate change. Patzek said: "Our ability to produce this resource at 8 billion tons per year, in my mind, is a dream,"[37] However, world coal production exceeded 8 billion tons per year in 2012 (8.2 billion), 2013 (8.19 billion), 2014 (8.085 billion),[38] 2022 (8.3 billion),[39] and 2023 (8.5 billion).[40]

2150 M. King Hubbert

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M. King Hubbert's 1956 projections from the world extraction curve estimated that world coal production would peak at approximately six billion metric tons per year at about the year 2150.[41]

2020 Energy Watch Group

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Coal: Resources and Future Production,[28] published in 2007 by the Energy Watch Group (EWG) found that global coal extraction could peak in as few as 15 years.[42] However, the graphs in their 2013 report show a peak in 2020.[43] Reporting on this, Richard Heinberg also noted that the date of peak annual energetic extraction from coal would likely come earlier than the date of peak in quantity of coal (tons per year) extracted as the most energy-dense types of coal had been mined most extensively.[44]

Institute for Energy

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The Future of Coal by B. Kavalov and S. D. Peteves of the Institute for Energy (IFE), prepared for European Commission Joint Research Centre, reached conclusions similar to those of Energy Watch Group, and stated that "coal might not be so abundant, widely available and reliable as an energy source in the future".[42] Kavalov and Peteves did not attempt to forecast a peak in extraction.

US Energy Information Administration

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In 2011 the US Energy Information Administration projected world coal consumption to increase through 2035.[45]

Hubbert's theory

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According toM. King Hubbert'sHubbert peak theory,peak coal is the point at which the maximum global coal production rate is reached, after which, according to the theory, the rate of production will enter a terminal decline.Coal is afossil fuel formed from plant matter over the course of millions of years. It is a finite resource and thus considered to be anon-renewable energy source.

There are two different possible peaks: one measured by mass (i.e. metric tons) and another by energy output (i.e. petajoules). The world average heat content per mass of mined coal rose from 8,020 BTU/lb. in 1989 to 9,060 BTU/lb. in 1999. Since 1999, the world average heat content of mined coal has been fairly steady, and was 9,030 BTU/lb. in 2011.[46]

Hubbert concluded that each oil region and nation has a bell-shapeddepletion curve.[22] However, this question was originally raised byWilliam Stanley Jevons in his bookThe Coal Question in 1865.

Hubbert noted thatUnited States coal extraction grew exponentially at a steady 6.6% per year from 1850 to 1910. Then the growth leveled off. He concluded that no finite resource could sustain exponential growth. At some point, the rate of extraction will have to peak and then decline until the resource is exhausted. He theorized that extraction rate plotted versus time would show a bell-shaped curve, declining as rapidly as it had risen.[47] Hubbert used his observation of the US coal extraction to predict the behavior ofpeak oil.

TheHubbert linearization using yearly production rates has weaknesses for peak coal calculation, as thesignal-to-noise ratio is inferior withcoal mining data compared to oil extraction. As a consequence, Rutledge[48] uses cumulative production for linearization. By this method theestimated ultimate recovery results in a stable fit for active coal regions. The ultimate production for world coal is estimated to be 680 Gt, of which 309 Gt have already been produced.However, in 2015 the World Coal Association reported that two different estimates of coal reserves remaining were 968 Gt (IEA/BGR) and 891 Gt (BP/WEC).[49]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Global coal demand to remain on a plateau in 2025 and 2026 - News".IEA. 24 July 2025. Retrieved17 August 2025.
  2. ^abcdRapier, Robert."Coal Demand Rises, But Remains Below Peak Levels".Forbes. Retrieved14 July 2020.
  3. ^"Executive summary – Accelerating Just Transitions for the Coal Sector – Analysis".IEA. Retrieved5 April 2024.
  4. ^"Coal 2024 – Analysis".IEA. 18 December 2024. Retrieved8 February 2025.The three largest producers – China, India and Indonesia – reached new records for output.
  5. ^"Global coal use at all-time high in 2023 - IEA".Reuters. 2023.
  6. ^Ambrose, Jillian (18 December 2024)."Coal use to reach new peak – and remain at near-record levels for years".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved18 December 2024.
  7. ^"Executive summary – Coal 2024 – Analysis".IEA. Retrieved20 February 2025.
  8. ^"Scotland closes last coal plant".ThinkProgress.
  9. ^"High Level Summary of Statistics Trend - Electricity Generation". Edinburgh: Scottish Government. 31 December 2017. Archived fromthe original on 14 January 2020. Retrieved4 November 2020.
  10. ^"Global coal peak 2013".ThinkProgress.
  11. ^"The world is losing the war against climate change". 2 August 2018. Retrieved6 August 2018.
  12. ^"Global coal demand is set to plateau through 2027 - News".IEA. 18 December 2024. Retrieved19 December 2024.
  13. ^"2016 Statistical Review of World Energy".bp global. June 2016. Retrieved8 June 2016.
  14. ^"Coal 2019 – Analysis".IEA. 17 December 2019. Retrieved5 November 2020.
  15. ^"UBS forecasts 'peak coal' in 2023, as China continues to ramp up power station construction while the West decommissions".Proactiveinvestors UK. 2 October 2020. Retrieved5 November 2020.
  16. ^Normile, Dennis (29 September 2020)."Can China, the world's biggest coal consumer, become carbon neutral by 2060?".Science | AAAS. Retrieved5 November 2020.
  17. ^"China Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) and Domestic 14th Power Five-Year-Plan (FYP)".Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air. Retrieved21 November 2020.
  18. ^Chuin-Wei Yap (20 October 2021)."China Takes the Brakes Off Coal Production to Tackle Power Shortage".The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved17 November 2021.China has ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity [...] It has ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity even during holidays, issued approvals for new mines [...] China's rollback of restrictions on mining and imports of coal
  19. ^"China generated over half world's coal-fired power in 2020: study".Reuters. 28 March 2021. Retrieved14 September 2021.China generated 53% of the world's total coal-fired power in 2020, nine percentage points more that five years earlier
  20. ^"Coronavirus lockdown speeds India's shift from coal to solar power".Climate Home News. 7 May 2020. Retrieved12 July 2020.
  21. ^"Thanks to COVID-19, emissions and coal use may have peaked in 2019".TechCrunch. 27 October 2020. Retrieved5 November 2020.
  22. ^abcdeM. King Hubbert (June 1956)."Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels 'Drilling and Production Practice'"(PDF).API. p. 36. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 May 2008. Retrieved18 April 2008.
  23. ^"US EIA".
  24. ^abUS Energy Information Agency:Coal production, selected years, 1949-2007
  25. ^Höök, Mikael; Aleklett, Kjell (2009)."Historical trends in American coal production and a possible future outlook"(PDF). International Journal of Coal Geology. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 5 November 2010.
  26. ^Gregson Vaux (27 May 2004)."The Peak in U.S. Coal Production". From the Wilderness. Archived fromthe original on 8 October 2009. Retrieved30 June 2008.
  27. ^Reaver, Nathan G.F.; Khare, Sanjay V. (September 2014). "Imminence of peak in US coal production and overestimation of reserves".International Journal of Coal Geology.131:90–105.Bibcode:2014IJCG..131...90R.doi:10.1016/j.coal.2014.05.013.
  28. ^abcd"Coal: Resources And Future Production"(PDF). Energy Watch Group. 10 July 2007. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 18 May 2015. Retrieved20 August 2010.
  29. ^Heinberg, Richard (21 May 2007)."Peak coal: sooner than you think". EnergyBulletin.net.
  30. ^Cooper, Mike (29 September 2020)."Australian coal producers are in a high-wire act to survive market downturn".Stockhead. Retrieved5 November 2020.
  31. ^Jefriando, Fransiska Nangoy, Maikel (23 October 2020)."UPDATE 2-Indonesia president orders ministers to target lower exports of raw coal".Reuters. Retrieved5 November 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  32. ^"Indonesia's president signals a transition away from coal power".Mongabay Environmental News. 16 July 2019. Retrieved12 July 2020.
  33. ^"Turkey breaks local coal production record in 2018".
  34. ^David Strahan (5 March 2008)."Lump sums".The Guardian. London. Retrieved9 June 2008.
  35. ^Alex Smith (27 September 2024)."Ratcliffe-on-Soar: UK's last coal-fired power station set to close".BBC News. London. Retrieved10 March 2025.
  36. ^"World coal production". US Energy Information Agency.
  37. ^Patrick Reis,"Study: World's 'Peak Coal' Moment Has Arrived",The New York Times, 29 Sept. 2010.
  38. ^"World Mineral Production 2010-14".British Geological Survey. 2016. Archived fromthe original on 7 June 2023. Retrieved8 February 2023.
  39. ^Anmar Frangoul (27 July 2023)."IEA says coal use hit an all-time high last year — and global demand will persist near record levels".CNBC. Retrieved10 September 2023.
  40. ^"Global coal use at all-time high in 2023 - IEA".Reuters. 2023.
  41. ^M. King Hubbert (June 1956)."Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels 'Drilling and Production Practice'"(PDF).API. p. 21. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 May 2008. Retrieved18 April 2008.
  42. ^abRichard Heinberg (21 May 2007)."Peak coal: sooner than you think". Energy Bulletin. Archived fromthe original on 22 May 2008. Retrieved6 June 2008.
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  44. ^Richard Heinberg (March 2007)."burn the furniture". Richard Heinberg. Retrieved6 June 2008.
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  47. ^M. King Hubbert (June 1956)."Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels 'Drilling and Production Practice'"(PDF).API. p. 8. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 May 2008. Retrieved18 April 2008.
  48. ^David Rutledge (January 2011)."Estimating long-term world coal production with logit and probit transforms".International Journal of Coal Geology.85 (1):23–33.Bibcode:2011IJCG...85...23R.doi:10.1016/j.coal.2010.10.012.
  49. ^"Coal Facts 2015"(PDF). World Coal Association. 31 March 2016. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 6 August 2020. Retrieved7 June 2020.

Further reading

[edit]
Coal types by grade
(lowest to highest)
Coal combustion
Coal mining
Notes: [1] Peat is considered a precursor to coal. [2] Graphite is only technically considered a coal type.
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