COLUMN-Trump cannot turn back time for ageing coal-fired power plants: Kemp

(Repeat with no changes. John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own)

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By John Kemp

LONDON, April 5 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump has promised to end "the war on coal" waged by the previous administration and help put coal miners back to work.

In practice, coal production and employment have been victims of the shale gas revolution rather than government regulation.

Coal-fired power generation has been steadily losing market share to natural gas since 1988, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Coal accounted for 57 percent of electricity generation in 1988 but that share fell to 53 percent in 1998 and 50 percent in 2008 (http://tmsnrt.rs/2o3nRSL).

Gas has been the main beneficiary with its share of generation climbing from 9 percent in 1988 and 13 percent in 1998 to 20 percent in 2008.

For much of that period, coal's relative decline was cushioned by growing demand for electricity which provided an expanding market for all fuels.

Coal consumption by power producers peaked at 1.05 billion short tons in 2007, up from 758 million tons in 1988 (http://tmsnrt.rs/2nE69Sv).

But since then the coal industry has been hit a perfect storm of stagnating electricity demand, a sharp fall in the price of gas, and a record warm winter in 2015/16.

Coal has continued to lose out to gas in the generation system but since 2008 the decline has been absolute as well as relative terms because demand for electricity is no longer growing.

Gas prices have fallen sharply thanks to the shale revolution, encouraging power producers to build more gas-fired power plants and run them for more hours each year.

And the unusually mild winter of 2015/16 resulted in an enormous build up of coal stockpiles at power plants and a sharp reduction in new shipments from the mines (http://tmsnrt.rs/2nDS2fR).

The resulting wave of bankruptcies, mine closures, and job losses and layoffs crashed over the coal industry during 2015/16.

But mine closures and job losses were the result of market forces rather than job-killing government regulations introduced by the Obama administration.

MORE COAL CLOSURES

Most mining companies and coal analysts are cautiously optimistic about the outlook for production and employment in 2017/18.

Excess coal stocks at the country's power plants have been worked down and a modest rise in gas prices should encourage power producers to run gas-fired plants for fewer hours in 2017/18 (http://tmsnrt.rs/2o32b9q).