China June coal output rebounds from six-month low as heatwave boosts demand
17 Jul 2023
BEIJING/SINGAPORE (Reuters) -
China's average daily coal production rebounded in June from a six-month low
the prior month, official data showed on Monday, as miners ramped up output to
meet increasing demand from power generators amid a heatwave.
China
churned out 390.1 million metric tons of coal last month, up 2.5% from a year
earlier and 1.2% from May, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
showed on Monday.
Daily
production in June was equivalent to 13 million metric tons, up from May's
12.43 million metric tons, which was the lowest level since October 2022.
Coal
output during the first half of 2023 reached 2.3 billion metric tons, 4.4%
higher than the same period last year.
Miners
have been urged by the government since June to step up output to fill their
supply contracts with utilities as rounds of blistering heatwaves have swept
across large swathes of China since late June.
Daily
coal consumption in eight coastal provinces in June surpassed the levels seen
over the same period of the past four years, data compiled by the China Coal
Transportation and Distribution (CCTD) showed.
Record
temperatures continue to boost air conditioning demand, driving daily coal use
at utilities last week to 2.4 million metric tons, highest by far this year,
according to data provider Wind and the CCTD.
China's
peak summer power demand typically starts in late June and lasts for two
months.
China's
National Climate Centre forecast that most of the country could see
temperatures 1 to 2 degrees Celsius (1.8 to 3.6 Fahrenheit) higher than normal
this month and next, while precipitation could be 10% to 20% lower than
average.
That
suggests stronger power demand but possibly lower output from hydropower
stations.
Hampering
efforts to lift coal production, however, China's mining safety watchdog
tightened inspections in late June, after deadly accidents were disclosed at an
iron ore mine in Shanxi and at a coal mine in Liaoning provinces.
Chinese
mines are known to be among the deadliest in the world and the country has
carried out several rounds of mining safety checks since late February
following an accident in Inner Mongolia that killed dozens of people.
The
average operations rate at major coal mines in the hubs of Shanxi, Shaanxi and
Inner Mongolia fell to 82% in June from 84% in May, data compiled by the CCTD
showed.
But coal
output is expected to increase further as some miners in Inner Mongolia could
be allowed to restart this month after being shut down since March to improve
mining safety.