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Environment & Energy
Showing Original Post only (View all)global coal consumption has advanced by over 50% in the past decade [View all]
...coal is the preferred energy source of the developing world.
In addition, as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has shifted its manufacturing to the developing world over the past few decades, coal has been the cheap energy source that has powered the rise of such manufacturing, especially in Asia. Accordingly, the extraordinary increase in global coal consumption the past decade is partly due to the OECD offshoring its own industrial production. How are most consumer goods made? Using electricity in developing world manufacturing centers, generated by coal.
Only a very small portion of the global public is aware that global coal consumption has advanced by over 50% in the past decade. According to data from the just-released BP Statistical Review, from 2001 through 2011, global consumption of coal rose an astonishing 56%. Using the energy unit Mtoe (million tonnes oil equivalent), global coal consumption rose 1,343 Mtoe, from 2,381 to 3,724 Mtoe. And this trend shows no sign of slowing down.
Additionally, this advance contrasts greatly with the flattening of global oil production and thus the slowdown in global oil consumption. Oil's price revolution has killed a great deal of oil demand. But few are aware that while oil has fallen as a portion of primary world energy supply, coal has stormed to prominence. This is why the export of US coal, and world trade in coal, still has room to run.
http://www.peakprosperity.com/blog/78984/coal-ignored-juggernaut

In addition, as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has shifted its manufacturing to the developing world over the past few decades, coal has been the cheap energy source that has powered the rise of such manufacturing, especially in Asia. Accordingly, the extraordinary increase in global coal consumption the past decade is partly due to the OECD offshoring its own industrial production. How are most consumer goods made? Using electricity in developing world manufacturing centers, generated by coal.
Only a very small portion of the global public is aware that global coal consumption has advanced by over 50% in the past decade. According to data from the just-released BP Statistical Review, from 2001 through 2011, global consumption of coal rose an astonishing 56%. Using the energy unit Mtoe (million tonnes oil equivalent), global coal consumption rose 1,343 Mtoe, from 2,381 to 3,724 Mtoe. And this trend shows no sign of slowing down.
Additionally, this advance contrasts greatly with the flattening of global oil production and thus the slowdown in global oil consumption. Oil's price revolution has killed a great deal of oil demand. But few are aware that while oil has fallen as a portion of primary world energy supply, coal has stormed to prominence. This is why the export of US coal, and world trade in coal, still has room to run.
http://www.peakprosperity.com/blog/78984/coal-ignored-juggernaut

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global coal consumption has advanced by over 50% in the past decade [View all]
phantom power
Jun 2012
OP
This is why rooftop solar in Germany doesn't mean anything in the big picture.
GliderGuider
Jun 2012
#1
Largest private generating company; 2.5% of the total generating capacity
muriel_volestrangler
Jul 2012
#16
The shortage is because India isn't exploiting their own reserves to their maximum.
joshcryer
Jul 2012
#25
2150 is what Hubbert called the date for "Peak Coal" 2025 according in Energy Watch
happyslug
Jul 2012
#43
In the meantime, I'm still sitting here waiting for more than a few token rooftop solar panels...
Systematic Chaos
Jul 2012
#13
Well then we better hope the US rescinds the "punitive" tariffs against Chinese PV companies.
David__77
Jul 2012
#29
Did you know that Germany is getting rid of coal subsidies? - "Saarland coal exit"
kristopher
Jul 2012
#39
Not sure why "advanced" is being used as a synonymn for "increased" here.
eppur_se_muova
Jun 2012
#7
India is building out its coal as well. Hundreds of new plants proposed or being built.
joshcryer
Jul 2012
#35
Coal is still extremely cheap and in non-OECD states a coal plant can be built quick.
joshcryer
Jul 2012
#41