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A crackdown by the Chinese government on surplus thermal coal has had a knock-on effect on the price - spelling good news for the miners of the fuel that investors and energy consumers love to hate.

The price of high-grade Australian thermal coal, the benchmark for the Chinese market, has climbed 20 percent from a low of $49 per tonne in January to over $59/t, according to Argus, a price reporting agency.

It's all down to threats by the Chinese government to punish regional governments that fail to close coal mines and steel mills considered surplus to domestic needs. Bloomberg explains what is happening:

Provincial governments must set capacity reduction targets by July 15 and submit detailed phase-out plans by the end of this month, said Xu Shaoshi, chairman of National Development and Reform Commission, the nation's top economic planner, according to a report by official Xinhua News Agency. About 800,000 coal and steel jobs are expected to be cut this year amid President Xi Jinping's supply-side reforms, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security said separately on Friday.

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Provincial governments that fail to stick to capacity cut plans or miss their targets will be "seriously punished," Xu said, according to the report Thursday. Regions shouldn't waver in the face of slowing economic growth and unemployment and should refrain from restarting closed mines and mills, he said.

The country is on a mission to seriously curtail the output of coal and steel, which are expected to fall by a respective 280 million tons and 45 million tonnes this year, says Bloomberg, as it deals with the fallout from slower economic growth and environmental mandates to improve air quality. Coal mines have been ordered to reduce capacity and operate only 276 days of the year versus 330 days previously.

The threats to shutter more production have Chinese buyers looking for outside sources to shore up their inventories. The Financial Times reports (subscription required) that over the last week, buyers have been purchasing cargoes on the spot market for fear that domestic supplies will run thin.

"There are so many cuts coming through domestically that China's consumers will probably need to engage the seaborne [or import] market," Tom Price, analyst at Morgan Stanley, told the FT. The newspaper says the bank is predicting China will import some 145 million tonnes of coal this year, representing around 16 percent of the seaborne trade.

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But it's a temporary measure. Mining.com reported in June that China has pledged to source 20 percent of its energy from low-carbon sources and cut emissions per unit of GDP by 60 percent of 2005 levels by 2030.

CRU, a research firm, expects China is "achieving the vast majority of its targets for thermal substitution". China added 138 gigawatts of new power generation capacity in 2015, an increase of 10 percent compared to 2014 - more than half of this reflected increases in nuclear, hydro and renewable power according to the report:

"This shift is only going to be accelerated, following the pause to approvals of thermal plants in areas with an excess of capacity. And when we look at this in more detail, we find the impact of that substitution on coal market share in the South East is extreme - falling from 64 percent to 49 percent over the next 4 years."

By Andrew Topf via Mining.com

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Andrew Topf

With over a decade of journalistic experience working in newspapers, trade publications and as a mining reporter, Andrew Topf is a seasoned business writer. Andrew also… More

Comments

  • Bill Simpson - 12th Jul 2016 at 9:05pm:
    Every day Australian businessmen must wake up hoping nothing goes seriously wrong in China.
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