China’s April coal output falls to lowest level since Oct 2022
20 May 2024
BEIJING: China’s coal production in April fell to its lowest level since
Oct 2022, statistics bureau data and Reuters records showed on Friday, as
continuing mine safety inspections curbed output.
Output was 371.67 million metric tons last month,
down 2.9% from a year earlier, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
That was also down 7% from March. Lower output
from China’s coking coal hub of Shanxi weighed on output after the local
government ordered a series of safety checks during March-May following an
uptick in deadly accidents, and told miners to curb excess production.
The province mined 29% of China’s coal last year.
Domestic coal prices were also likely their lowest
for 2024 in April, according to the China Coal Transportation and Distribution
Association (CCTD), leaving miners with little enthusiasm to ramp up
production.
Sliding coking coal prices put
pressure on steel, iron ore
China’s production will likely remain below
year-earlier levels in May-June before seeing an uptick in July as safety
inspections ease, and due to improved demand, said a Shanghai-based analyst who
requested anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media.
Industry experts say production at Shanxi’s coal
mines will be a deciding factor in overall industry output this year.
Shanxi has set a production target that is about
4% lower than 2023, but it may struggle to increase output enough in the
remaining months of the year to hit that target, the Shanghai-based analyst
said.