Holiday on ice as coal mines get skates on to beat Beijing curbs
20 Jan 2017
Chinese coal miners are so determined to cash in on a window of high prices that many are slashing holiday leave for workers and raising pay through the Lunar New Year celebrations before government introduces limits on output again.
Prices in China, the world's biggest coal user, have slipped back 16 percent from their two-year peak of 610 yuan ($88.83) per tonne two months ago, but they are still profitably high after a couple of barren years for miners.
"At current price levels, we would love to have 73 hours in a day, so that we can produce as much as possible," a private coal mine owner based in Wuhai, Inner Mongolia, told Reuters.
That urgency reflects a broad expectation among analysts and mining executives that Beijing will order them to reduce output after the festivities, once winter heating demand has peaked.
In April 2016, with many miners failing to turn a profit, government ordered mines to limit the number of days they operate each year to 276 days from 330 as part of its effort to cut inefficient surplus capacity.
By November, however, it was forced to ditch that policy to avert a winter energy crisis after a double-digit percentage drop in output triggered a sharp rally in prices.
Now miners are determined not to be caught on the hop, and are racing to get their coal to market, aware that Beijing still aims to slash 500 million tonnes of output by 2020, just over 16 percent of current levels.
Major producers including Shanxi Kaijia Energy Group, ChinaCoal and Shandong Yulong Group in Shandong, Hebei, Shanxi and Shaanxi, are allowing workers an average of seven days' leave for the festival this year, according to China Sublime Information Group, which surveyed 30 companies.
That is well down on the last two years, when prices were below break-even for many miners, who in response typically gave workers a generous 45-60 days off for the occasion, mining executives and analysts said.
"In 2015 and 2016, most of the coal mines we visited were shut down starting Jan. 1. This year, they are postponing the holiday to as late as January 27," said Zhang Min, coal analyst at Sublime.
Reuters spoke to five coal mines in Inner Mongolia, China's largest producing region, and they, too, said they had cut leave to around 10-20 days for the festivities, which officially begin on Jan. 27 and last for a week, down from about 30 days in 2016.
Two of them said they were raising wages by 30 and 50 percent through the period, too.
Source: Reuters.COm