China's coal output up 2.8% in July despite surging hydropower generation
16 Aug 2024
A thermal power plant
is seen near residential buildings in Beijing, China November 21, 2018. Picture
taken November 21, 2018. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo
BEIJING, Aug
15 (Reuters) - China's coal output rose 2.8% in July from a year earlier as
mines ramped up production to ensure steady supply amid record-breaking
heat, statistics bureau data showed, even though thermal power
output fell while hydropower generation surged.
The world's largest
coal producer mined 390.37 million metric tons of the fuel last month,
according to the National Bureau of Statistics data on Thursday, down from
June's 405.38 million tons, which was the highest level since December 2023.
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China's national
energy regulator said late in July it was coordinating power plant coal
inventories to keep them at a minimum of 200 million tons because of continuing
hot weather.
Average daily coal
output in July stood at 12.59 million tons, according to Reuters calculations,
down from 13.5 million tons a day in June but up from 12.18 million daily tons
a year earlier.
Thermal power output
disappointed the coal industry in July, however, falling for a third straight
month as more electricity was generated by hydropower because of heavy
rains in July.
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China's thermal power
generation fell 4.9% to 574.9 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) even as total power
generation rose 2.5% to 883.1 billion kWh, the statistics showed.
Meanwhile, hydropower
generation for the month rose 36.2% on the year to 166.4 billion kWh.
China's growing
coal-to-chemicals industry is offsetting some of the slowing demand for
coal-fired power, with coal consumption in the chemicals industry growing 21%
in the first half of the year, wrote Lauri Myllyvirta, senior fellow at the
Asia Society Policy Institute.
"China's energy
security drive and falling coal prices relative to oil prices have driven a
boom in this industry," Myllyvirta said.
Analysts have said
they expect China's coal output to keep increasing through the third quarter on
the hotter weather and as production recovers from a slump earlier in the year
due to safety inspections.
Production was lower
particularly in China's coking coal hub of Shanxi province, which produced 29%
of China's coal last year. Output was limited there after the local government
told miners to curb excess production and announced stepped-up safety checks
over the March-May period.
Output for
January-July fell 0.8% from the year earlier to 2.66 billion tons, the
statistics bureau data showed.