Coal: Low Supplies And Rising Demand

 | Sep 03, 2021 05:48AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Thermal coal rises to its highest price since 2008 - Metallurgical coal explodes to the upside
  • Central Appalachia coal has been rallying
  • Coal is critical for the world- Electricity, iron ore, and steel
  • Top coal producing countries
  • Supply issues as demand increases

Coal is a fossil fuel and an energy commodity along with crude oil and natural gas. The black or brownish-black sedimentary rock formed as rock strata called coal seams. Coal is mostly carbon with variable amounts of other elements, including hydrogen, sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen.

In the 1800s, people began using coal to heat their homes. Trains and ships used coal as fuel. Factories used the hydrocarbon to produce iron and steel. Today, coal is still burned to make electricity in China and India, the two most populous nations.

Coal is a four-letter word in the energy complex. Sulfur, mercury, lead, and arsenic escape into the air during the burning process causing pollution and health dangers. Environmentalists cite the carbon dioxide emissions from burning coal as a primary cause of climate change.

The US has switched the input in power generation from coal to natural gas, but India and China continue to burn coal. Addressing climate change has caused mining companies to curtail their coal operations, creating a strain on coal’s fundamental equation. Coal prices have been rising over the past year.

h2 Thermal coal rises to its highest price since 2008 - Metallurgical coal explodes to the upside/h2

Thermal coal for delivery in Rotterdam has been moving steadily higher since May 2020.