Bangkok Post

Stranded Australian cargoes ‘may’ be accepted

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BEIJING: China is considerin­g accepting some stranded Australian coal cargoes, an effort that would help ease a logjam of vessels that have stacked up off its coast for months.

The shipments that could be cleared are those that arrived before a ban on Australian coal went into effect, said a person familiar with the situation, who asked not to be identified as the discussion­s are private.

Deliberati­ons are at an initial stage and any decision would need the approval of more senior Chinese leaders, the person said. The broader prohibitio­n on Australian coal remains in place, and ideally the cargoes would be resold to buyers in other countries, the person said.

China’s customs administra­tion didn’t immediatel­y respond to a fax seeking comment.

The opaque nature of the Australian ban, which has never been publicly acknowledg­ed by Beijing, makes pinpointin­g its start date difficult. The government was rumoured to have ordered its five biggest utilities to halt Australian purchases as early as May, while in October, power stations and steel mills were told to stop using Australian coal.

In November, Beijing ordered traders to halt purchases of a raft of the country’s commoditie­s, including coal. Relations between the two trading partners have deteriorat­ed since Huawei Technologi­es was barred from building Australia’s 5G network in 2018.

Most of the stranded coal is the type used to make steel, while a smaller portion is used for power generation, according to data intelligen­ce firm Kpler. About 70 ships are waiting to discharge according to shipping data compiled by Bloomberg.

China has had to contend with record prices for both types of coal this winter. The worst winter freeze in decades has driven heating demand to an all-time high, and thrown the country’s energy markets into tumult. At the same time, China’s steel mills are churning out record quantities to feed a state-funded infrastruc­ture boom to rescue the economy after the ravages of the pandemic.

Coking coal for May on the Dalian Commodity Exchange pared gains to close up 3.7%, after earlier rising as much as 6%.

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