WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The Oracle of Omaha sees a future in coal--especially from the Western U.S.--despite the political forces opposing the fuel.
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett on Tuesday billed his plans to buy the 77% of railroad operator Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. (BNI) he doesn't already own as an "all-in wager on the future of the United States." But as much as anything, the offer amounts to a bet on the near-term use of a fuel with a mixed reputation in an era of concern about global warming: coal.
"This is a $34 billion dollar bet that coal will remain the centerpiece of American energy policy in the future," Frank O'Donnell, the president of environmental group Clean Air Watch, wrote in a note to clients. "Buffett clearly believes that coal use will remain strong."
Burlington Northern carries coal that generates about 10% of all U.S. electricity. Last year, coal shipments accounted for about 23% of the Fort Worth, Texas, company's freight revenue. The majority of that---some 90%--came from coal produced in the Powder River Basin, the coal-rich area in Wyoming and Montana. Big mining companies shipping coal through Burlington Northern include Arch Coal Inc. (ACI).
The coal business isn't very popular right now in the nation's capital, where much of official Washington is massing forces against the fuel, which accounts for half of all U.S. electricity. Global warming activist and former U.S. Vice President Al Gore has said that the U.S. should find new jobs for coal workers because the resource is too damaging to keep using. The Obama administration has been clamping down on certain kinds of coal mining, citing the magnitude of damage to water and streams.
But to those who follow the power industry--and Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRKA, BRKB) also owns utility MidAmerican Energy Co., is among them--there is another business reality: Coal isn't going away anytime soon. Even if the U.S. puts a cap on the carbon-dioxide spewed out by major sources such as coal-fired power plants, large amounts of coal will still be needed. But it also is likely to mean rising coal prices, as companies are forced to pay for pollution generated from coal.
"As energy prices go up, it becomes more and more important to ship by rail--that's a factor," Buffett said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. "It's a factor in why the country has a huge interest in fostering rail." He said that rails "carry a lot of coal, but 25 years from now they won't be carrying as much."
With a smaller market to serve, U.S. analysts say that the big winner will be the producers of low-sulfur coal from the Powder River Basin.
Built into the purchase is an assumption that "over a longer period of time, Powder River Basin coal from Wyoming takes some share way from eastern coal," said Jeremy Sussman, an analyst at Brean Murray Carret & Co. Inc.
Because coal in the Eastern U.S. has been mined for the longest time, reserves are depleting at a faster rate than in other regions, so what is left is harder to get at, and thus more expensive, Sussman said. He also said that global demand means that coal reserves in Appalachia will be snapped up overseas. That leaves Powder River Basin coal as a big supplier in the U.S.
Buffett isn't the first one to make a bet on coal from the region. Earlier this year, Alpha Natural Resources Inc. (ANR) completed its purchase of Foundation Coal Holdings Inc., whose two main mines, Belle Ayr and Eagle Butte, are located in Wyoming. The proposed Burlington purchase makes a bet on the same two facilities: Burlington Northern is the only railroad to ship from both mining complexes. Some of the coal from Belle Ayr is shipped to MidAmerican, said an Alpha spokesman.
"I guess it's a good time to be making bets," said Ted Pile, the Alpha spokesman.
-By Siobhan Hughes and Mark Peters, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6654; siobhan.hughes@dowjones.com
(Scott Patterson of The Wall Street Journal contributed to this report.)