The long-expected move made Peabody just the latest and largest of dozens of US miners to go under as the fracking revolution made cleaner natural gas cheaper to use for steel plants and power generators at the same time that demand from China's huge coal-dependent industrial sector began to fall.
St Louis, Missouri-based Peabody lost USD 2.04 billion last year on USD 5.6 billion in revenues, as both coal prices and volumes shipped to customers in 26 countries sank.
"All of the company's mines and offices are continuing to operate in the ordinary course of business and are expected to continue doing so for the duration of the process."
It announced the move after arranging USD 800 million in new financing supported by some of its existing creditors to help tide it over through restructuring.
It also came after the company failed to sell assets in New Mexico and Colorado.
"This was a difficult decision, but it is the right path forward for Peabody. We begin today to build a highly successful global leader for tomorrow," Peabody president and chief executive Glenn Kellow said in a statement.
Trade in Peabody shares was halted after they ended at USD 2.07 yesterday, down 75 per cent since the beginning of the year. The shares were trading above USD 75 a year ago.
Peabody has been hurt by both the plunge in oil and natural gas prices -- a direct consequence of the fracking revolution in the United States that unleashed huge new supplies -- and the economic slowdown in China, the world's leading coal consumer, where half the steel industry has been idled.
Facing the same challenges, about two dozen US coal companies have sought bankruptcy protection or closed in the past three years.
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