Global coal demand is on course to rise by 0.5% in 2025, reaching a record 8.85-billion tonnes, the ‘Coal2025’ report published by the International EnergyAgency (IEA) shows.
Nevertheless, the IEA is still forecasting that demand will fall by 2030, largely owing to shifts in the electricity sector, which currently accounts for two-thirds of total coal consumption.
“With renewable capacity surging, nuclear expanding steadily, and a huge wave of liquefied natural gascoming to market, coal-fired power generation is forecast to decline from 2026 onward,” the report states.
However, coal demand from industry is expected to remain more resilient.
The largest absolute increase in coal consumption to 2030 is expected to take place in India, where demand is set to rise by 3% a year on average, leading to an overall increase of over 200-million tonnes.
This, despite a fall in demand in 2025 in India, where an early and intense monsoon season resulted in a decline in coal use for only the third time in five decades. The fall was partly offset by a rise in consumption in the US, where demand has been falling for 15 years, supported by higher natural gas prices and policy measures that slowed coal plant retirements.
The fastest growth is forecast for Southeast Asia, however, where demand is set to increase by over 4% a year to 2030.
In China, which currently accounts for more than half of global coaluse, demand is expected to fall slightly by the end of the decade, amid a rapid deployment of renewable energy capacity and a government goal for domestic coalconsumption to peak by 2030.
China reduced imports in 2025 due to oversupply and sluggish demand, a trend that is expected to continue to 2030, leading to a reduction in coal trade worldwide.
As a result, the IEA sees coal output declining in most major producer countries through 2030, including a slight fall in South African output.
Production in South Africa is estimated at 234-million tonnes for 2025, which was almost stable compared with 2024.
However, improved railperformance could add up to 10-million tonnes of export capacity over the next three years, the report states.
South African coal production is projected to be 228-million tonnes in 2030, as logistics reforms partly offset the structural decline in investment.
