Auditing and Financial Management - Prospects for Long-Term U.S. Steam Coal Exports to European and Pacific Rim Markets: Nsiad-83-8 (Paperback)


In response to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the competitiveness and long-term prospects for U.S. steam coal exports to European and Pacific Rim markets which use steam coal for electricity generation and industrial heating. GAO found that, although U.S. steam coal exports are expected to increase in volume over the long term, they probably will remain a small portion of total U.S. coal production. The recent U.S. steam coal export boom, which peaked in mid-1982, was largely attributable to supply disruptions in other major coal exporting countries. U.S. exports began to decline as Poland and Australia entered the market after extended strikes. The United States is the high-cost supplier of steam coal in both regions. South Africa and Australia have much lower production and delivery costs and could underprice U.S. exporters by significant margins, but choose to price their coal only marginally below U.S. prices to maximize their profits. Poland, a centrally planned economy, bases the prices of its coal exports on its need to obtain foreign hard currency. The U.S. share of international steam coal markets, therefore, depends largely upon the market strategies of its major competitors: South Africa and Poland in Europe and Australia in the Pacific. The cost of producing and delivering the coal to the foreign market is the primary barrier to increasing U.S. coal exports. Production, port, and rail transportation capacities appear adequate to handle current or projected export levels.

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Product Description

In response to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the competitiveness and long-term prospects for U.S. steam coal exports to European and Pacific Rim markets which use steam coal for electricity generation and industrial heating. GAO found that, although U.S. steam coal exports are expected to increase in volume over the long term, they probably will remain a small portion of total U.S. coal production. The recent U.S. steam coal export boom, which peaked in mid-1982, was largely attributable to supply disruptions in other major coal exporting countries. U.S. exports began to decline as Poland and Australia entered the market after extended strikes. The United States is the high-cost supplier of steam coal in both regions. South Africa and Australia have much lower production and delivery costs and could underprice U.S. exporters by significant margins, but choose to price their coal only marginally below U.S. prices to maximize their profits. Poland, a centrally planned economy, bases the prices of its coal exports on its need to obtain foreign hard currency. The U.S. share of international steam coal markets, therefore, depends largely upon the market strategies of its major competitors: South Africa and Poland in Europe and Australia in the Pacific. The cost of producing and delivering the coal to the foreign market is the primary barrier to increasing U.S. coal exports. Production, port, and rail transportation capacities appear adequate to handle current or projected export levels.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Bibliogov

Country of origin

United States

Release date

June 2013

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

June 2013

Creators

,

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 3mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

58

ISBN-13

978-1-289-08246-8

Barcode

9781289082468

Categories

LSN

1-289-08246-4



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