Business Standard

Iron ore from paradise wins no takers as China upends market

- SWANSY AFONSO BLOOMBERG

A China-led flight to quality in the global iron ore market is punishing producers of the lower-grade material, with miners in India facing an increasing battle to find buyers for their cargoes as demand dwindles.

In Goa, exporters are struggling to sell even a quarter of what they shipped last year, according to Glenn Kalavampar­a, secretary at the Goa Mineral Ore Exporters’ Associatio­n. “There’s absolutely no market,” he said by phone from Panaji, capital of the western state that’s better known for its sparkling beach resorts. “The preference for higher-grade ore is a major concern,” he said.

While Indian exports account for just a fraction of the global seaborne market of about 1.4 billion tonnes that’s dominated by Vale, Rio Tinto Group and BHP Billiton, the plight of the low-grade shippers highlights the new dynamic. A concerted antipollut­ion push in China this winter has supercharg­ed the premium commanded by higher-grade material, which is more efficient. This week, Rio pointed to “clear evidence” of a structural change in the market, and earlier this year, BHP highlighte­d the industry’s “new reality”.

“There are hardly any exports,” R K Sharma, secretary-general of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said by phone from New Delhi. Sharma has been working in the sector for almost five decades, and at one time saw Indian exports top 100 million tonnes. “Even the Goans who are near the ports and have the least costs in the country are not able to sell,” he said.

China’s push to clean the air has exploded the price differenti­al between high and low grades. On Friday, spot ore with 65 per cent iron content from Brazil was at $87.20 a dry tonne, while benchmark material of 62 per cent was $69.35, and 58 per cent was less than $40, according to Metal Bulletin.

Goa shipped half of India’s total exports of about 31 million tonnes in 2016-17, with a seasonal pattern to trade, as the retreat of the four-month monsoon around the end of September usually brings a revival in activity.

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