- Lehman Sues Barclays Over Windfall Profits
- Obama Nudges Hu on Yuan; to Ease Trade Tensions
- UBS Targets $15 Billion Annual Profit in Mid-Term
- Fed's Kohn Sees No Asset Bubbles Building in US
- Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Boosts Stake in Wal-Mart
- Microsoft Co-founder Allen Diagnosed with Cancer
- Time Warner to Spin Off AOL on December 9
- Gates Boosts Waste Management, Coca Cola Stakes
- US Cities With Most Underwater Mortgages
- Answers to Your Questions: A Path to Economic Disaster?
- 5 Ways to Play the Chinese Markets: Analyst
- Meredith Whitney: Turns Bearish
- 3 Stock Plays on Rising College Costs
- Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Almost Doubles Wal-Mart Holdings During Summer
- Nov. 16: Unusual Volume Leaders
- Getting to the Heart of the Merck-Abbott Embargo Break
- What MGM's Sale Could Say About Value of Content
- My Ratings on Lowe's & Home Depot: Analyst
- AP IMPACT: Tobacco execs quickly find tax loophole
- Budget airline easyJet FY profit down 14 percent
- Burberry Group PLC 1st-half profit down 24 percent
- Business foes of health care revamp ramp up effort
- Job prospects drawing students to ag schools
- Tajikistan bans production of standard light bulbs
- Cable and Wireless to split in 2 by March 31
- UBS sets mid-term goal: $15BN pretax profit a year
- Singapore's exports stumble in October
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Coal mining companies from Appalachia to Missouri are seeing plenty of rebounding demand, just not here at home.
Fresh from reporting third-quarter earnings, coal producers say booming Asian economies are increasingly hungry for energy even as the hardest-hit mining regions in the U.S. see little prospect for a comeback in coming months.
Big coal producers such as St. Louis-based Peabody Energy and Arch Coal say the rising demand for metallurgical coal, a key ingredient in steelmaking, is largely a foreign phenomenon.
On Tuesday, the top U.S. producer of metallurgical coal, Alpha Natural Resources, said it's planning to up production 1 million tons next year to take advantage and CEO Kevin Crutchfield said orders are starting to come in from Eastern and Western Europe.
America, on the other hand, remains in the doldrums.
"Nobody is seeing any effect of the stimulus in the U.S.," said steel industry analyst Charles Bradford of Affiliated Research Group. "There is recovery in world steel output."
That's not much help for domestic mines or U.S. mine workers. Metallurgical coal commands premium prices, but accounts for a relative sliver of U.S. production. The bulk of U.S. coal goes to electric power plants and they're not interested in buying these days.
There have been massive piles of unused coal outside of U.S. plants, a symptom of a country that is in a deep industrial funk.
As of August, electric plant stockpiles were up nearly 40 percent from the previous year, according to U.S. Department of Energy.
The recession, a very cool summer and cheap natural gas has slashed the amount of coal that power can use.
Producers have now idled enough U.S. mines to trim approximately 100 million tons of coal_ roughly 9 percent — from production this year. Hundreds of miners in West Virginia, Kentucky and other key coal states have lost their jobs.
The cuts are continuing.
International Coal Group shuttered a West Virginia mine employing about 70 people in late September after electric utility Allegheny Energy stopped taking shipments.
On Tuesday, Alpha trimmed another 1 million tons from its production guidance for mines in Wyoming's Powder River Basin.
Most U.S. producers believe things will not improve before next year, including Crutchfield. He suggested the market might begin to turn closer to 2011.
The problems at home only highlight the sharp rebound in Asia.
A half dozen U.S. producers including Peabody, Consol Energy, ICG, Alpha and Arch Coal reported stronger than expected third-quarter financial results on the strength of sales in China, in addition to high-priced contracts signed in 2008 and lower costs.
For the foreseeable future, the action is in China, where steel plants are operating at better than 90 percent capacity.
Peabody Energy quickly boosted activity in Australia because it is close to China, even opening a trading hub in Singapore during the third quarter.
- Where, what, how.
- CNBC's Jim Goldman asks: Has the sun begun to set on Twitter? Data suggests its best days are over.
- Everyone wanted a piece of Madoff's "Bullship"--the famous buoy sold for $7,500 at auction. You won't believe these prices.
- De Loach Vineyards is selling its pinot noir the old fashioned way, helping to cut energy and transportation costs.
- Why are the Chinese concerned about the progress of U.S. health care legislation?
- CNBC's Maria Bartiromo talks to rapper Snoop Dogg about brand identity in both business and music.








