The coal market’s best hope of breaking a four-year losing streak may be its biggest supplier’s plan to burn more at home. Indonesia plans to expand generating capacity by 46 percent in four years with new power plants, half of them burning coal. If that happens, fuel consumption may triple to the equivalent of 76 percent of last year’s exports and boost prices more than 50 percent, the Indonesia Coal Mining Association says. The country currently consumes less electricity than Taiwan, a nation with about a 10th of its population. Benchmark Asian coal prices fell every year since 2010 after producers from Australia to Colombia flooded the market and demand faltered in China, the biggest consumer. “Any reduction in Indonesian exports helps the seaborne market,” said Ted O’Brien, chief executive officer of Doyle Trading Consultants, a coal industry analytical firm based in Grand Junction, Colorado. “Like other Asian countries, […]