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Anti-Shale Greens Help Old King Coal Back To Power

It is a night and day difference in power markets on the different sides of the Atlantic ocean. Coal generation is booming in the UK, where it just displaced natural gas as the top source of electricity. What’s the difference? The price of natural gas is low here and expensive there, because America has embraced the Shale Gas revolution, while the UK and Europe have not.

In the UK, coal is rising and provides 42% of its electricity. In the US, coal is falling and generates 32% of our electricity, as of April 2012.

What’s the difference? The price of natural gas is low here and expensive there, because America has embraced the Shale Gas revolution, while the UK and Europe have not. And so, according to the Sun, “experts say the high price of gas has forced power firms to return to coal” in the UK.

Like it or not, at this stage of the world’s development, the basic energy choice is between gas and coal. That’s a fact.

John Hanger’s Facts of the Day, 29 June 2012

see also: Europe’s Flawed Carbon Scheme Drives Coal Boom

Europe’s economic slump is allowing utilities in some countries to burn increasing amounts of cheap, highly polluting coal for electricity generation and still meet legally binding targets to cut carbon dioxide emissions, Reuters research shows.

The EU’s carbon scheme, its main tool to fight global warming, caps CO2 emissions on around 12,000 industrial and power plants in 30 countries and requires them to purchase permits to exceed those caps.

The supply of permits has increased, however, to the equivalent of several hundred million tons of emissions due largely to slowing industrial output. Preliminary EU data suggests emissions in the capped market fell just over 2 percent last year.

Prices have slumped accordingly. Polluters currently pay around 7 euros ($9.13) per ton of CO2 emitted, down 60 percent from the same time last year.

The low costs of being allowed to pump carbon into the atmosphere mean that utilities have leeway to burn more coal.

At the same time, profits based on benchmark German prices for electricity generated by coal-fired plants have risen by around 30 percent since the beginning of the year to their highest levels since 2008 and could lead to a 13.5 percent year-on-year jump in German hard-coal power production, Reuters research shows.

“If you have anything that’s coal-fired in your generation park at the moment – be it lignite or hard coal – you will take advantage of the high margins and burn the stuff,” a trader with a major German utility said.

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