China's state planner sets out irregular price-pushing behaviors for coal
02 May 2022
China's state planner
warned domestic thermal coal producers and traders on Saturday not to hoard
stock or engage in a list of other practices that it said amounted to pushing
up prices.
Industry players should not make up false information on supply
levels and costs that could heat up the market, the National Development and
Reform Commission (NDRC) added in its statement.
The NDRC said it was setting out what it considered as
price-pushing behaviors to maintain market order.
China has been trying to rein in controls amid surging commodity
prices and looking into setting up a price index of products such as coal and
iron ore.
Any significant rises in coal prices without a good reason would
not be allowed, the NDRC added.
A "substantial price increase" would be any
medium-to-long term contract coal sales prices higher than the upper range of
government requirement, or spot prices rising more than 50 percent of the
limit.
China said on Thursday it was exempting all types of coal from
import tariffs from May till the end of March 2023.
Coal is an important primary product for the national economy
and people's livelihood, as coal power accounts for about 60 percent of China's
total power generation. In the autumn-winter season last year, coal prices rose
sharply, affecting the energy supply and increasing costs.
To help coal prices return to a reasonable range, the NDRC
issued a guidance in February to improve the price formation mechanism in its
coal market, which proposed a relatively reasonable range for the medium- and
long-term trading on the basis of market-formed prices.