China's July coal imports surge 24% to meet peak power load
08 Aug 2022
China's
coal imports in July rose by nearly a quarter from June to near the highest
levels so far this year as power generators increased purchases to provide for
peak summer electricity demand.
Arrivals
of the fuel totalled 23.52 million tonnes last month, up sharply from 18.98
million tonnes in June but 22% lower than a year earlier, data issued by the
General Administration of Customs showed on Sunday.
Over
the first seven months of the year, China imported 138.52 million tonnes of
coal, down 18% on the same period of 2021.
Daily
coal consumption in major coastal regions hovered around 2.2 million tonnes in
late July, a similar level to last year, according to Shanghai Shipping
Exchange. A temperature spike across the country drove up the use of air
conditioning.
The
government has vowed to avoid power rationing this year and has urged
coal-burning power generators, which supply about 60% of the country's
electricity, to enlarge coal stocks.
Data
tracked by Refinitiv showed China's seaborne coal imports from Russia would hit
a record high of 7.38 million tonnes in July.
However,
analysts have expected coal demand will soon begin to ease as temperatures
moderate, while industrial activity remains sluggish amid COVID-19
restrictions.
(Reporting
by Muyu Xu and Chen Aizhu; Editing by Bradley Perrett and Kim Coghill)