China coal output up 5.8% in Jan-Feb as new capacity comes online
15 Mar 2023
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's coal
output rose by 5.8% in the first two months of 2023 from the same period a year
earlier, government data showed on Wednesday, as new mining capacity came
online and Beijing encouraged miners to boost production to improve energy
security.
China,
the world's biggest coal miner and consumer, produced 734.23 million tonnes of
the fuel during the January-February period, up from 686.6 million tonnes in
the same period in 2022, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS).
That's
equivalent to 12.44 million tonnes per day, down from 12.99 million tonnes per
day in December, as coal mines lowered operation rates or even shut down during
the week-long Lunar New Year holiday, which fell in late January this year.
The
statistics bureau combines data for January and February because of the
national holiday.
A sharp
increase in global coal prices and disruption of energy supply chains following
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has prompted Beijing to increasingly prioritise
energy security.
Miners
ramped up output in anticipation of improving demand following the lifting of
COVID-19 restrictions at the end of last year.
The
government last year approved 260 million tonnes of new coal mining capacity
and reopened a number of previously mothballed mines.
Shanxi
and Inner Mongolia, China's top two mining hubs by production, have vowed to
lift output by at least 5% and 2% this year, respectively.
Safety-related
closures only had a modest impact on output. Governments in several key coal
producing regions, such as Inner Mongolia, Shanxi and Shaanxi, ordered snap
safety checks and inspections at open pit coal mines after the collapse of an
open-pit mine in Inner Mongolia last month.
Most coal
mines resumed normal operations in early March, two industry sources said.
In the
January-February period, China produced 77.63 million tonnes of coke, up 3.2%
from a year earlier, the NBS data showed.
China coal output up 5.8% in Jan-Feb as new capacity comes
online