Los Angeles Times

Trump vowed to save coal, but miners face mass layoffs

- By Will Wade Wade writes for Bloomberg.

The clearest sign yet that America’s coal country is headed for widespread job cuts: The amount of coal being produced per U.S. miner is at the lowest level in eight years.

Productivi­ty has slid 11% this year alone. The last time it was this low was in 2011, when coal companies ended up cutting almost half their workers in a downturn that lasted more than four years.

It underscore­s the intense pressure facing U.S. coal producers. For years, they relied on exports and metallurgi­cal coal used for steelmakin­g to offset shriveling demand from U.S. utilities. Now even those markets are suffering as the global economy slows, liquefied natural gas becomes cheap and plentiful in Asia and President Trump’s trade war churns away.

The bottom line: U.S. production is expected to slide 10% this year, and jobs are at risk.

“It’s highly likely there will be more layoffs,” said Phil Smith, a spokesman for the United Mine Workers of America union. “I don’t think there’s any question.”

The looming downturn comes as Trump, who vowed to rescue the coal industry by easing environmen­tal regulation­s, begins his reelection campaign. Winning a second term will hinge in part on mining stronghold­s he carried in 2016, including West Virginia and Pennsylvan­ia.

“The president is committed to all Americans, including our great hardworkin­g coal miners,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said in an email.

Cutbacks are underway. On Monday, Peabody Energy Corp. said it plans to close an Illinois mine and lay off about 225 workers. Blackhawk Mining idled four West Virginia mines this month and fired about 340 people. And in September, Murray Energy Corp. shut mines in West Virginia.

“Most coal-mining companies will have to reassess production,” said Mike Dudas, an analyst with Vertical Research Partners.

The number of U.S. coal jobs bottomed out at about 48,800 in 2016 as Arch Coal Inc., Peabody and other big miners worked their way through bankruptcy, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Then, as exports picked up and Trump began his push to roll back environmen­tal regulation­s, hiring followed suit. The industry added about 4,500 jobs through last month.

Now the market has turned. Lower production means U.S. coal workers will each produce an average of about 12,700 tons this year, based on an analysis of production estimates from the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion and employment figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s the second-lowest production rate in two decades.

“People are going to have to get laid off,” said Andrew Cosgrove, a mining analyst for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “They’re going to have to close mines.”

The moves reflect the confluence of woes pummeling the industry. Electricit­y producers are shunning the fuel in favor of cheaper natural gas, wind and solar. Global prices for coal shipped to power plants have plunged by more than one-third in the last year in both Europe and Asia. Prices for metallurgi­cal coal — used in steelmakin­g — fell last month to the lowest since January 2017, and there’s little sign of a recovery. Weak demand in South America and Europe, coupled with port restrictio­ns in China, led to an oversupply of that steelmakin­g coal.

 ?? Steve Helber Associated Press ?? A GROUP of coal miners holds up signs in support of Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump before a rally in Charleston, W.Va., in May 2016.
Steve Helber Associated Press A GROUP of coal miners holds up signs in support of Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump before a rally in Charleston, W.Va., in May 2016.

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