In 2014, German coal production was an estimated 195
million tonnes (Mt), up by 2% over 2013. Much of the coal produced is lignite,
and production is concentrated in four provinces: Rhineland, North
Rhine-Westphalia, Brandenburg and Saxony.
The 'Coal Mining in Germany to 2020' report
comprehensively covers the country’s historic and forecast data on coal
production, reserves, consumption and trade to 2020. The consumption section
provides information on consumption by type and by end-use while the trade
section provides information on import volumes by country and by type. The
report includes drivers and restraints affecting the industry, profiles of
major coal mining companies, information on the major active and exploration
projects and regulations governing the industry.
The Fiscal Regime section provides information about
the country’s regulatory authority, laws, licenses and other fiscal regime
information such as taxes, rates and other charges applicable to the mining of
the commodity in the country. It is an essential tool for companies active in
German mining, and for new competitors considering entering the industry.
Scope
The report contains an overview of the German coal
mining industry together with the key growth factors and restraints affecting
the industry. Further, it provides information about reserves, historic and
forecast production, coal prices, domestic consumption, imports, export by
country and by type, demand drivers, competitive landscape and major active and
exploration projects.
Reasons to Buy
Gain an understanding of the German coal mining
industry, the relevant drivers and restraining factors, reserves, historic and
forecast production, coal prices, consumption and trade, demand drivers,
competitive landscape, major active and exploration projects and the country's
fiscal regime.
Key Highlights
- The German policy to build new coal-fired power plants is projected to support its coal mining industry, since the power sector has traditionally accounted for more than 90% of the country’s coal consumption.
- In addition to these new coal fired plants, Germany has adopted a policy to phase out nuclear power. This potentially increases demand for coal fired electricity generation, although renewables could also fill at least part of this void.
- In 2011, the government established a new policy, Energiewende (energy transition), which outlined plans to shift Germany’s energy generation from nuclear and fossil fuels to renewable sources. The primary objectives of the policy was to cut carbon emissions by 80–95%, fight climate change, and reduce and eliminate the risk of nuclear power.
- The country’s consumption of coal in 2014 was an estimated 247Mt, 98% of which was consumed by the power generation sector.
Spanning over 33 pages, “Coal Mining in Germany to 2020” report
covers the Executive Summary, Coal Mining in Germany, Coal Mining in Germany –
Reserves, Production, Consumption and Trade, Competitive Landscape, Fiscal
Regime, Appendix. The report covered companies are - RWE Power AG, Vattenfall
GmbH, RAG AG
For further information on this report, please visit- http://mrr.cm/4WL
Find
all Coal Mining Reports at: http://www.marketresearchreports.com/coal-mining
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