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China to slash coal imports in second half

Move aims to support domestic miners

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BEIJING:CHINA is expected to tighten coal import rules in the second half of 2020 to shore up its struggling domestic industry, after record arrivals in the first four months, just as demand tanked because of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Imports could drop as much as a quarter in the second half from the correspond­ing 2019 period, analysts estimate, which is likely to boost pressure on major coal exporters, such as Australia, Indonesia and Russia, which are already battling weak demand because of the virus.

China’s total thermal coal consumptio­n may reach 1.9 billion tonnes from July through December, said Yu Zhai, a senior consultant at Wood Mackenzie.

Imports would account for about 80 million tonnes of that, or a quarter less than the 107 million in the correspond­ing 2019 period, Yu expects.

James Stevenson, a senior director at IHS Markit, estimates China’s full-year coal imports could fall to 275 million tonnes, with thermal coal plunging about 20% on the year, but seaborne metallurgi­cal coal arrivals seeing a slight pick-up.

China’s National Coal Associatio­n expects demand to decline in the second quarter on the year, after a fall of 6.8% in the first quarter as the virus shut industrial plants.

Chinese coal miners have cranked out record output in 2020 in response to Beijing’s call to ensure energy supplies, but the flood of imports, coupled with lower consumptio­n, slashed profit margins by 30% in the first quarter.

“Chinese coal miners are going through a difficult time,” said a coal associatio­n official who sought anonymity as he was not authorised to talk to media. “So coal-fired power plants have been encouraged to purchase more from domestic supplies.”

Over the past month or so, at least three traders said, coal importers have already seen customs clearing processes extend to 40 days from around a week usually, with new conditions set for importers since March.

Still, the limits did little to slow imports during the first four months of 2020, which jumped 26.9% from the same period in 2019 to 126.73 million tonnes, customs data show.—

 ?? — AFP ?? Falling demand: Workers sort coal on a conveyer belt near a coal mine in Datong, in China’s northern Shanxi province. China’s National Coal Associatio­n expects demand to decline in the second quarter on the year, after a fall of 6.8% in the first quarter as the virus shut industrial plants.
— AFP Falling demand: Workers sort coal on a conveyer belt near a coal mine in Datong, in China’s northern Shanxi province. China’s National Coal Associatio­n expects demand to decline in the second quarter on the year, after a fall of 6.8% in the first quarter as the virus shut industrial plants.

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