Coal-fired power plants are shutting down left and right as utilities shift toward cheaper natural gas and wind and solar power. Melissa McHenry, a spokesperson for American Electric Power, one of the largest U.S. utilities, says the company is not planning to build any more coal plants, and says "The future for coal is dictated by economics … and you can’t make those kinds of investments based on one administration’s politics." AEP gets 47 percent of its power generating capacity from coal, but plans to shrink that to 33 percent by 2030.
President Trump's pro-coal policies may have little long-term effect on the coal industry. Luke Popovich of the National Mining Association, which represents major U.S. coal companies, told Gardner that "The government is no longer against us . . . We now only have market forces to contend with." According to Standard & Poor's Global, natural gas will probably overtake coal permanently by 2030 or 2035.
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2ACm7Do Despite temporary gains, coal expected to decline in 2018 - Entrepreneur Generations
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