Australia Sees Commodities Boom Lifting Exports to Fresh Record
04 Jul 2022
·
Income
set to rise 3.5% in year through June before dropping
·
Energy
commodities benefiting as nations avoid Russian supplyOpen
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Australia’s minerals exports are set
to reach unseen heights for a second year, as a global crunch lifts the value
of the nation’s coal and natural gas.
Unprecedented
income from liquefied natural gas and coal as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
roils energy markets will more than offset waning earnings from top export iron
ore, the Australian Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources said.
The nation will ship A$419 billion ($286 billion) of metals and energy
commodities in the year to June 30, 3.5% more than in the prior period and 13%
more than estimated in its previous quarterly report.
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In a world bereft of readily available
energy supplies -- and increasingly disruptive volatile weather -- the price
for thermal coal has rocketed to a record just as global economic activity
rebounds from Covid-related slowdowns. The loss of some Russian supply from
world markets has compounded the outlook, in which prices are expected to drift
down but remain, on average, at relatively high levels, the department
said.
Steady volume growth will also help
boost the headline figure -- which, if actualized, would mark a second
consecutive year of earnings in excess of A$400 billion, the department
said.
Oil prices, while near the highest in
a decade on the back of fears about looming shortages from EU sanctions on
Russia, are expected to retreat as the global supply picture gradually outpaces
the recovery in demand. Spot LNG remains volatile amid heightened global
uncertainty, with prices likely to remain “very high for some time” as nations
scramble for alternatives to Russian gas, according to the report.
Beyond energy, iron ore earnings are
expected to slip further, despite optimism about improving demand from China as
Beijing doubles down on efforts to boost its economy and a forecast increase in
volumes. With recovering supplies out of Brazil, as well as gains in output
elsewhere, prices are expected to fall over the outlook period. The steelmaking
material’s share of total minerals exports will drop to just over a quarter
from almost a third in the prior period.
Higher global interest rates pose a
downside risk to global economic activity and, by extension, resource and
energy export earnings, according to the department. Income is expected to fall
to A$338 billion in 2023–24, which would still be the third-highest ever, it
said.