Weekly Reports |Jun 13 2018
Donald Trump is looking to take extraordinary measures to save America's coal-fired and nuclear power generators.
-US government to intervene in electricity market-Upbeat mood at nuclear conference-Spot price continues to tick higher
By Greg Peel
While the US oil & gas industry is enjoying a significant resurgence with the advent of new technologies in shale fracking, the US power generation industry is in crisis. Cheap gas means gas-fired power generators are significantly more competitive for the benefit of electricity generation, while renewable sources are enjoying state-based subsidies.
The price of coal is not cheap in relative terms, thanks to demand from China. Hence coal-fired generators, which also take a much longer time to switch and on off than gas-fired, are uncompetitive. So expensive is the cost of nuclear power generation that even with the uranium price at historical lows, nuclear generation is also uncompetitive.
In the absence of support to date, America's legacy nuclear plants are shutting down, or threatening to do so. Plans for new plant construction in many instances remains in limbo.
While Americans may be rejoicing at the availability of cheap, gas-fired electricity, the threat of the death of the coal-fired and nuclear generation industries is a risk to the diversification of US power supply, and to that end, national security - two of Donald Trump's favourite words (just ask Justin Trudeau).
To address the crisis, the president has directed his Energy Secretary to take "immediate steps" to bolster coal-fired and nuclear power plants that are economically challenged, being a matter of both national and economic security.
The plan is not, nevertheless, to provide federal subsidies, but to order electricity grid operators to buy electricity from coal-fired and nuclear plants to ensure they remain in operation. An initial two-year period is being considered, to ensure grid reliability and "promote the national defense and maximise domestic energy supplies".
As uranium industry consultant TradeTech notes, such an order would represent and unprecedented intervention into US energy markets.
Such an order would also result in a step-up in CPI inflation, given the consumer would be the one paying higher electricity prices.
Down in Monterey
Attendees at global commodity-based conferences typically come away feeling more positive as there is a tendency for all involved to "talk up" their prospects. However recent global conferences for the uranium/nuclear fuel markets, of which there are a handful each year, have been largely dour affairs. It's a bit hard to make a silk purse out of the sow's ear that is the market post-Fukushima, as reflected in persistent, historically low uranium prices.
However the mood at last week's World Nuclear Fuel Market conference, held in Monterey, California, was "upbeat and hopeful" according to TradeTech. The theme of this year's conference was "Searching for 'Eureka!' In the midst of a Seismic Shift".