China’s coal production achieves double-digit growth for four consecutive months: official data
19 May 2022
China's coal production has maintained a strong
momentum since the beginning of 2022, with the domestic output of raw coal from
January to April reaching a 10.5 percent year-on-year growth and achieving a
double-digit growth for four consecutive months, new official data showed.
Among the 10.5 percent growth, the production from
the nation's major coal producing provinces and regions including Northwest
China's Shaanxi Province and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, North China's
Shanxi Province and Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region accounted for 80.9 percent
of the total output, according to data from the National Energy Administration on
Wednesday.
The National Development and Reform Commission
(NDRC), China's top economic planner, has been strengthening supervision and
implementing targeted policies to ensure a stable energy supply and prices.
Officials from the NDRC held a video conference
recently with a number of coal enterprises in Shanxi on the back of pricing
coal sales prices exceeding a reasonable range, the NDRC said on Wednesday.
Involved enterprises have made written commitments on strict implementation of
relevant policies and keeping the coal prices within the normal range.
The NDRC will guide the coal prices to ensure they
remain in a reasonable range in a bid to stabilize electricity prices and
overall energy costs, Meng Wei, a spokesperson from the NDRC said at a press
conference on Tuesday, stressing the importance to implement measures such as
improving the demand and supply mechanism and enhancing the market expectation
management.
Meng also noted that NDRC will closely monitor the
price changes and take immediate action in the case of unreasonable price
fluctuation and speculations.
The NDRC issued a notice on April 30 to further
improve the pricing mechanism for the domestic coal market. The notice clearly
determines market behaviors for price gouging, including hoarding, faking or
spreading false information for price increase, and other behaviors.
The notice also defines the price gouging as spot
price which exceeds 50 percent of the upper limit of the reasonable range
standardized by responsible authorities without proper reasons.