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Crops, not coal, are best for Oakland

Agricultural exports are the future for the Port of Oakland...not coal.


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The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis is presenting testimony to the Oakland City Council today that questions the wisdom of a proposal to expand the Port of Oakland’s coal-export capacity at the Oakland Army Base Redevelopment project.

According to Tom Sanzillo, IEEFA’s director of finance, the deal being considered raises several red flags.

• First, the developer is taking a major financial risk by relying so much on coal in its planned commodity-export mix. Such overreliance would jeopardize what otherwise stands to be a successful publicly-funded project. He notes in his testimony that a global consensus among investment banks is that global coal markets are in a state of collapse and that there is little likelihood of a turnaround in the foreseeable future. He notes also that market trends worldwide do not bode well for coal. That means the project as currently modeled has a high likelihood of default.

• Second, Bowie Resources, the coal company associated with this project, is a weak financial partner. In addition to being subject to the ongoing global downturn in coal markets, the company is under extreme pressure in its domestic coal business as U.S. coal plants rely less and less on coal. Like most U.S. coal producers, it is pursuing unrealistic plans now to export coal out of West Coast ports to Asia.

• Third, the State of Utah’s pledge of financial assistance for the project serves to underscore the lack of private financial investment in the coal industry today, and the developer itself has missed a deadline to deliver a promised $200 million investment in the Oakland project.

“Frankly, coal is an unnecessarily risky investment for Oakland and will not yield the activity predicted by the developer behind this proposed port expansion (California Capital & Investment Group),” says IEEFA.


They rightly point out that thermal global coal markets are in a state of collapse, the U.S. coal industry is in free-fall, foreign demand for imported coal is declining—especially in China and India—and coal prices are at historic lows.

Critics note that coal is not part of the commodity-export mix that has helped the Port of Oakland thrive.

Furthermore, it will not be a boon to the port, and there is no sensible place for it in any port-expansion project. Indeed, a project commitment to coal would work only to undermine the financial viability of the expansion.

As LM has noted in recent stories, the port is concentrating on many innovative solutions to keep it a world class gateway.  But we the agree that the risks associated with what Bowie Resources and its allies have in mind for Oakland are not worth it.


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About the Author

Patrick Burnson's avatar
Patrick Burnson
Mr. Burnson is a widely-published writer and editor specializing in international trade, global logistics, and supply chain management. He is based in San Francisco, where he provides a Pacific Rim perspective on industry trends and forecasts.
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