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Our system has never spotted coalinvestingnews.com in Alexa ratings.
This fact suggests that domain has very low traffic.
The most recent time we have spotted coalinvestingnews.com on Quantcast list was on February 6, 2014 (3,761 days ago) and then the rank was 437,715. And this is the best position that coalinvestingnews.com ever had in Quantcast.
Website is hosted on IP 104.239.152.29.
The host name of this IP address is web1.investingnewsnetwork.com.
There are 18 websites hosted on exact the same IP and 104 websites that are hosted on similar IP address.
Our database records shows that this website can be similar to: uraniuminvestingnews.com, ironinvestingnews.com, goldinvestingnews.com, graphiteinvestingnews.com, lifescienceinvestingnews.com, palladiuminvestingnews.com, rareearthinvestingnews.com, copperinvestingnews.com, tungsteninvestingnews.com, molyinvestingnews.com and maybe even more.
We've checked coalinvestingnews.com recently and it was online. The load time was 0.2768 seconds faster than average. The size of document was 158,559 bytes longer than usually. The website contained 335 links more than the average.
It seems that coalinvestingnews.com is optimised for mobile devices.
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It seems that coalinvestingnews.com was never dropped before.
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Our system found out that there could be 291 domains with the same beginning as coalinvestingnews.com
Our system found out that there could be 80 mistakes made in the typing process.
And here you'll find analysis of HTML code:
PROPERTY | VALUE |
---|---|
Keywords: | Coal Investing |
WEB address: | http://coalinvestingnews.com/ |
Summary: | For thousands of years coal has been used as an important source of energy, and while it once played a crucial role in driving the Industrial Revolution, today, coal is one of the largest sources of energy for electricity generation in the world. Coal provides about 30 percent of global primary energy needs and generates over 40 percent of the world’s electricity, according to the World Coal Association. World coal consumption was about 3881.8 million tonnes according to the latest BP Statistical Review of World Energy. Some of the top producers of both thermal and metallurgical coal include China, the US, Australia and Russia. Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea are among the five largest importers, along with China and India. Coal is classified at varying contents of volatiles, which determines the amount and quality of energy it produces. The most commonly mined classifications are sub-bituminous coal, used primarily as fuel for steam-electric power generation, and bituminous coal, also used primarily as fuel in steam-electric power generation, but with substantial quantities also used for heat and power applications in manufacturing as well as the production of coke – an important component of steel fabrication. These are most commonly referred to as thermal coal and coking, or metallurgical coal respectively. Coal has been the subject of numerous environmental concerns, both in its mining and its burning for energy production. Two main environmental concerns associated with the use of coal are pollution, caused by emissions of harmful contaminants such as sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and mercury, and greenhouse gases emissions which contribute to global warming. The leaders of the G-20—the world’s top industrialized nations—as well as other key countries with developing economies, have agreed to phase out their subsidies for fossil fuels, including coal. The agreement plans to ultimately phase out nearly $300 billion US in global subsidies for fossil fuels. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the International Energy Agency estimate that eliminating fossil fuel subsidies worldwide would cut global greenhouse gas emissions by 10 percent or more by 2050. In spite of the globally acknowledged harm caused by reliance on fossil fuels, both coal production and consumption is on the rise. Production of hard coal was 5990Mt in 2009, up from 3497Mt in 1990. China, the world’s fastest growing major economy, has massive coal reserves, but the country’s energy consumption is growing so rapidly that in 2010, it began importing more coal than it exports. China imported nearly 50 million tons of coal in the first half of 2010, up almost 130 percent from a year ago. China has overtaken the US as the world’s heaviest consumer of coal. Combined with an increase in global demand, that change has triggered a shift in the world market for energy. Currently about 70 percent of China’s energy needs are met by coal. Except for price inflation generated following the energy crisis of 1973, U.S. coal prices were relatively stable from 1973 through 2007. In 2008, coal prices witnessed a spike when Australia – the world’s largest overall coal exporter – was hit by floods that forced several producers to shut their mines, causing a huge decline in output. In addition, a power crisis in South Africa resulted in the closing of mines, which further decreased global production. In 2010, floods in Australia once again caused disruptions which drove up coal prices to unusually high levels. Both thermal and metallurgical coal prices have fallen dramatically in recent years, and many analysts say that a material recovery in pricing is still a few years away. Still, a number of industry experts agree that with the growing power demands of China and India, the demand and price of coal will recover once the industry moves to cut oversupply. “If you are a longer-term, well-capitalized investor comfortable with taking on some commodity price risk, it really is a buyer’s market out there,” said Joe Aldina of Wood Mackenzie at the end of 2014. |
<title> | Coal Investing News | Investing News Network |
Hosting information: | Click here for more hosting information |
Size of HTML code: | +158,559 bytes compared to average |
Total number of links: | +335 links compared to average |
Load time: | -0.27680565 seconds compared to average |
META TAG PROPERTY | VALUE |
og:url | http://investingnews.com/category/daily/resource-investing/industrial-metals-investing/coal-investing/ |
og:description | For thousands of years coal has been used as an important source of energy, and while it once played a crucial role in driving the Industrial Revolution, today, coal is one of the largest sources of energy for electricity generation in the world. Coal provides about 30 percent of global primary energy needs and generates over 40 percent of the world’s electricity, according to the World Coal Association. World coal consumption was about 3881.8 million tonnes according to the latest BP Statistical Review of World Energy. Some of the top producers of both thermal and metallurgical coal include China, the US, Australia and Russia. Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea are among the five largest importers, along with China and India. Coal is classified at varying contents of volatiles, which determines the amount and quality of energy it produces. The most commonly mined classifications are sub-bituminous coal, used primarily as fuel for steam-electric power generation, and bituminous coal, also used primarily as fuel in steam-electric power generation, but with substantial quantities also used for heat and power applications in manufacturing as well as the production of coke – an important component of steel fabrication. These are most commonly referred to as thermal coal and coking, or metallurgical coal respectively. Coal has been the subject of numerous environmental concerns, both in its mining and its burning for energy production. Two main environmental concerns associated with the use of coal are pollution, caused by emissions of harmful contaminants such as sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and mercury, and greenhouse gases emissions which contribute to global warming. The leaders of the G-20—the world’s top industrialized nations—as well as other key countries with developing economies, have agreed to phase out their subsidies for fossil fuels, including coal. The agreement plans to ultimately phase out nearly $300 billion US in global subsidies for fossil fuels. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the International Energy Agency estimate that eliminating fossil fuel subsidies worldwide would cut global greenhouse gas emissions by 10 percent or more by 2050. In spite of the globally acknowledged harm caused by reliance on fossil fuels, both coal production and consumption is on the rise. Production of hard coal was 5990Mt in 2009, up from 3497Mt in 1990. China, the world’s fastest growing major economy, has massive coal reserves, but the country’s energy consumption is growing so rapidly that in 2010, it began importing more coal than it exports. China imported nearly 50 million tons of coal in the first half of 2010, up almost 130 percent from a year ago. China has overtaken the US as the world’s heaviest consumer of coal. Combined with an increase in global demand, that change has triggered a shift in the world market for energy. Currently about 70 percent of China’s energy needs are met by coal. Except for price inflation generated following the energy crisis of 1973, U.S. coal prices were relatively stable from 1973 through 2007. In 2008, coal prices witnessed a spike when Australia – the world’s largest overall coal exporter – was hit by floods that forced several producers to shut their mines, causing a huge decline in output. In addition, a power crisis in South Africa resulted in the closing of mines, which further decreased global production. In 2010, floods in Australia once again caused disruptions which drove up coal prices to unusually high levels. Both thermal and metallurgical coal prices have fallen dramatically in recent years, and many analysts say that a material recovery in pricing is still a few years away. Still, a number of industry experts agree that with the growing power demands of China and India, the demand and price of coal will recover once the industry moves to cut oversupply. “If you are a longer-term, well-capitalized investor comfortable with taking on some commodity price risk, it really is a buyer’s market out there,” said Joe Aldina of Wood Mackenzie at the end of 2014. |
og:locale | en_US |
og:type | object |
og:title | Coal Investing News | Investing News Network |
og:site_name | Investing News Network |
sitelock-site-verification | 6025 |
viewport | width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0 |
robots | noodp |
apple-mobile-web-app-capable | yes |
No data about Alexa yet.
This table shows websites that use 104.239.152.29 (web1.investingnewsnetwork.com) for hosting:
Note: The matching part of IP address is marked with this style.
Website: | coalinvestingnews.com |
---|---|
Most recent position: | 437,715 reached on February 6, 2014 (3,761 days ago) |
Times found in quant list: | 149 |
Average position: | 777,050 |
All time highest position: | 437,715 reached on February 6, 2014 (3,761 days ago) |
All time lowest position: | 997,891 reached on December 16, 2013 (3,813 days ago) |
There are 291 alternatives to coalinvestingnews.com
We believe that these mistakes can be made in the typing process of "coalinvestingnews.com":
No data about coalinvestingnews.com being in dropped domains database...