Coal is having one last moment in the sun. The International Energy Agency's latest forecast shows global coal demand hitting a new all-time high in 2025, then beginning what looks like a permanent slide through the end of the decade. It's a peak that tells two stories at once: the world still runs on coal more than we'd like to admit, but the transition away from it is finally gaining real momentum.
According to the IEA's 2025 Coal Report, global consumption should climb 0.5% this year to approximately 8.85 billion tons. That's a new record, which feels almost surreal given how much renewable capacity is coming online. But here's the thing: starting in 2026, coal-fired power generation is forecast to decline as renewables surge, nuclear expands steadily, and a massive wave of liquefied natural gas floods the market.
The continued strength in coal isn't a mystery. Resilient industrial activity, weather-related swings in power demand, and periods of elevated natural gas prices have all slowed the transition from coal to gas in major markets. Asia's power-hungry economies are the main driver of this latest uptick, though the United States is contributing a surprising temporary bounce as well.
China's Coal Consumption Approaches Its Peak
China is the elephant in the room, or more accurately, the dragon burning more coal than everyone else combined. Chinese demand has stayed roughly flat compared to 2024, thanks to an aggressive build-out of renewable energy that's starting to cap growth. Beijing has committed to peaking domestic coal consumption before 2030, and the IEA expects Chinese use to decline slightly by decade's end. The drivers are clear: solar, wind, and nuclear capacity are being deployed at breakneck speed, while energy and climate policies gradually tighten.
China's coal imports already fell in 2025 amid oversupply and sluggish demand, a trend the IEA expects to continue through 2030. That's going to put serious pressure on seaborne coal trade and the exporters who depend on it.
India Becomes the Growth Story
India sits on the opposite end of the spectrum. An early and intense monsoon reduced the country's coal-fired generation in 2025 for only the third time in five decades. Despite that temporary dip, the IEA still expects India to post the largest absolute increase in coal use by 2030.
Indian demand is forecast to grow at roughly 3% per year, adding more than 200 million tons over the period. Rising electricity consumption and expanding steel production are driving demand for both power and metallurgical coal. Southeast Asia is growing even faster in percentage terms, with coal use expected to rise more than 4% annually through 2030 as Vietnam and the Philippines commission new coal-fired capacity to support industrialization and urbanization.
The U.S. Coal Comeback That Won't Last
U.S. coal consumption is projected to grow 8% in 2025, which sounds dramatic until you realize it breaks a 15-year pattern of roughly 6% average annual declines. Higher natural gas prices, delays in coal plant retirements, and federal policy measures supporting existing units have all contributed to this temporary reversal. But the IEA is clear: U.S. coal use will resume its structural contraction, falling around 6% per year on average through 2030 as renewables and gas regain momentum and aging plants finally close.
Coal Stocks Riding the Late-Cycle Wave
Publicly traded coal producers are capturing this late-cycle strength. Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU), a major supplier of both thermal and metallurgical coal, has benefited from firm export and domestic demand. Its shares have doubled over the past six months, significantly outpacing the broader U.S. energy sector.
Meanwhile, Warrior Met Coal Inc. (HCC), a leading exporter of metallurgical coal to global steelmakers, has also ridden the wave of resilient demand. The stock gained nearly 56% year-to-date, with analysts pointing to robust margins and the expansion potential of its Blue Creek project.
Still, the IEA stresses that coal's high-water mark is arriving. Global demand is forecast to plateau and then decline slightly, with consumption in 2030 expected to be about 3% lower than in 2025. That would push coal-fired generation below its 2021 output, marking a genuine turning point.
Price Watch: Range Global Coal Index ETF (COAL) is up 8.32% year-to-date.




