Times Colonist

Wild weather, COVID cut into Teck coal sales

-

VANCOUVER — Teck Resources Ltd. said Friday that its coal sales fell below its guidance because of extreme weather in British Columbia and warned that COVID-19 was leading to higher costs and could disrupt production.

Shares in the company were down $2.32, or 5.7 per cent, at $38.36 in trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Friday.

Teck said steelmakin­g coal sales for the fourth quarter came in at 5.1 million tonnes, below the 5.2 million to 5.7 million tonnes in its revised guidance it issued Dec. 5 after the record rainfall in B.C. that knocked out rail and road infrastruc­ture.

The lower sales came as extreme cold weather in B.C. this winter led to further interrupti­ons and substantia­l reductions to rail service and port activities.

The company had guidance for 6.4 million to 6.8 million tonnes sold for the quarter before the November deluge.

Vancouver-based Teck said coal production at Elk Valley wasn’t affected by the November events because inventorie­s at its operations were low at the time, but that the cold weather disruption­s have led to nearrecord inventorie­s and the company could be forced to reduce production if there are further transporta­tion disruption­s.

The disruption­s have also increased costs at its operations, but Teck said higher steelmakin­g coal prices should offset those costs and it expects to substantia­lly make up the lost sales volume in the first half of this year.

Teck also said that the Omicron variant of COVID-19 is leading to increased staff absences at its coal operations in B.C. as well as at its QB2 project in Chile.

It says that while absences have yet to have a major impact, the situation poses a risk to first quarter production and that costs have risen because of labour inefficien­cies related to COVID-19.

The company said it has updated its COVID capital cost guidance for QB2 to between $900 million US and $1.1 billion US, up from its previous estimate of $600 million US.

The company also warned that it was seeing inflationa­ry cost pressures, especially on diesel prices, supplies and labour costs, and that increases it saw in the fourth quarter are expected to continue into this year.

National Bank analyst Shane Nagle said in a note that while fourth-quarter results still showed a record quarter, he expects earnings to take a hit.

He said, however, that he expects improvemen­ts in Teck’s coking coal operations this year once the Neptune terminal expansion in North Vancouver, B.C., is complete, while record coal prices should also help the company.

“Teck’s strong balance sheet, cost reduction initiative­s, organic growth within the copper division and long-term commitment to returning capital to shareholde­rs are all supportive of a higher valuation than currently ascribed by the market.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada