Business Day

Fortescue works to clear iron ore held in China ‘as soon as possible’

- Melanie Burton and Rishav Chatterjee

Fortescue will work with Chinese authoritie­s to resolve the delays keeping some of its iron ore cargoes from clearing customs, a company official said on Thursday.

The comments on the Chinese customs delays came during a conference call discussing the world’s fourth-largest iron ore miner’s quarterly production, which largely met analyst expectatio­ns.

Responding to a question on whether the company was expecting more customs checks on its iron ore cargoes to China, Vivienne Tieu, Fortescue’s director of sales, marketing and shipping, said: “We will just work through with the relevant port authoritie­s to understand what they need, such that we clear the cargoes as soon as possible.”

A Reuters report on Tuesday, quoting sources, said two of Fortescue’s iron ore cargoes were facing unusual customs delays at the northern Chinese port of Caofeidian because of inspection­s for solid waste.

The delays are occurring as Fortescue is negotiatin­g a 2024 procuremen­t deal with state iron ore buyer China Mineral Resources Group, which was set up in July 2022 to centralise purchasing and gain more bargaining power with global miners.

Tieu declined to comment on the negotiatio­ns because of commercial sensitivit­ies.

Earlier, Fortescue said shipments of iron ore were 48.7million tonnes in the quarter ending on December 31, bringing

first-half shipments to 94.6-million tonnes, the second highest ever.

Fortescue also trimmed its financial 2024 shipments forecast at its new Iron Bridge magnetite project where it needs to replace a leaking high pressure water pipeline for an additional estimated $100m.

Full-year Iron Bridge shipments are forecast to be 2-million to 4-million tonnes, down from 5-million tonnes. It kept its overall full fiscal-year shipment forecast unchanged at 192-million to 197-million tonnes.

Shares were up 1.5% at A$28.83 ($18.96) amid strength in major miners.

Prices of the low-grade iron ore that Fortescue mainly produces have been supported as Chinese still mills focus on conserving margins amid lingering weakness in the country’s constructi­on sector.

However, analysts are concerned that weakness will eventually affect the stock price of miners such as Fortescue.

“The valuations of FMG and the other iron ore miners still look rich, especially given the headwinds coming from China,” said Kyle Rodda, senior financial market analyst at Capital.com.

Iron Bridge will allow Fortescue to blend high-grade ore output from the project with its lower grade ore, raising the average iron content above 60%, making it more competitiv­e when compared to BHP Group and Rio Tinto.

Also on the call, Mark Hutchinson, the CEO of the Fortescue Energy unit, said the company was in talks to potential customers to supply hydrogen from the 80MW electrolys­er facility that it plans to build in Texas, capable of producing up to 12,000 tonnes a year of green hydrogen.

Hutchinson also said final investment decisions on green energy projects in Norway, Brazil and Kenya are being readied.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Maintenanc­e: Fortescue has trimmed its financial 2024 shipments forecast at its new Iron Bridge magnetite project where it needs to replace a leaking high pressure water pipeline.
/Reuters Maintenanc­e: Fortescue has trimmed its financial 2024 shipments forecast at its new Iron Bridge magnetite project where it needs to replace a leaking high pressure water pipeline.

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