China is Awash With Coal as Import Surge Adds to Mining Boom
02 Nov 2023
(Bloomberg)
-- China is struggling to digest a growing glut of coal, as robust domestic
output and soaring imports threaten to overwhelm the coming wave of winter
demand.
Prices for the mainstay fuel have come under
sustained pressure, and analysts are warning that the winter-heating season —
due to kick in later this month — won’t be enough to offset relatively modest
industrial demand.
There was panic selling this week after a few
key ports warned traders that space for stockpiling was at risk of running out,
the China Coal Transport and Distribution Association, or CCTD, said at a
Wednesday briefing.
“It’s turning into a buyers’ market,” said Gao
Lanying, analyst at Cqcoal, a leading Chinese pricing agency said. The annual
surge of demand for household heating in the colder months is now unlikely to
soak up bloated inventories and excess supply, she said.
China has ramped up coal output since the 2021
power crisis in order to avoid a repeat, with this year’s annual production set
to notch another record. Demand growth has also been relatively subdued amid
China’s bumpy economic recovery.
But it’s a spike in imports that’s tipped the
market into a more serious imbalance. Traders have taken advantage of cheaper
supplies in the rest of the world, with imports up 73% for the first nine
months of the year. Inbound volumes hit a record in August.
The flood of coal marks a major turnaround from
this period two years ago, when shortages of the fossil fuel triggered
widespread power cuts that hurt businesses and households. That’s less likely
to happen with plentiful coal supplies, although authorities are still alert to
that risk in some regions.
Read more: China’s Cooling Coal Price Damps
Fears of Power Crunch in Winter
The weakening spot market offers a bearish
backdrop to annual supply negotiations for 2024 between China’s coal miners and
major buyers. China Coal Energy Co., the second-biggest producer, said the
benchmark price is expected to be lower next year.
Demand uncertainties will weaken import
purchases through the rest of this year, Su Huipeng, a CCTD analyst said, but
total annual imports could still reach a record 460 million tons for
2023.