Europe imports more South African coal as Russian ban looms
15 Jun 2022
JOHANNESBURG, June 15 (Reuters) - European countries, scrambling
to secure alternatives to Russian coal, imported 40% more coal from South
Africa's main export hub in the first five months of this year than over the
whole of 2021, figures obtained by Reuters showed on Wednesday.
South Africa's Richards Bay Coal Terminal (RBCT) delivered
3,240,752 tonnes of coal to European countries by end-May this year, 15% of
RBCT's overall exports, up from 2,321,190 (4%) in 2021, the figures showed.
Starting the second week of August, Russian coal imports will be
banned in the European Union, part of wide-ranging sanctions on Moscow.
RBCT did not immediately reply to a request for comment. RBCT
usually provides figures annually, and does not give a comprehensive breakdown
of export destinations.
The Netherlands, Italy, France, Spain, Denmark, Poland, Germany,
and Ukraine have received coal from RBCT so far this year. Some of them only
began importing from RBCT after Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb 24.
The Netherlands received no coal from RBCT in January or
February, but imported 1.27 million tonnes of coal from the terminal in March,
April and May, with volumes increasing each month. It was the fourth top
recipient of RBCT coal, accounting for 5.76% of total volumes.
France's coal imports from RBCT jumped nearly seven-fold, from
just 68,005 tonnes over the whole of last year to 464,432 tonnes so far this
year.
Spain, Poland and Germany did not import any coal from RBCT last
year. In the first five months of this year, Spain has imported 355,250 tonnes,
Poland 181,515 tonnes and Germany 157,383 tonnes.
Japan, which has also said it would ban Russian coal imports,
received 388,249 tonnes of coal from RBCT since January, nearly double the
tonnage it bought last year. read more
China, the third biggest importer of coal from RBCT in 2021 with
6.09 million tonnes, did not receive any coal from the terminal this year, the
figures showed, reflecting China's increased imports of Russian coal.
The surge in exports to Europe came despite a backdrop of poor
performance at RBCT, underscoring the missed opportunity for South Africa as
prices of the fossil fuel shot up.
Poor maintenance, a lack of locomotives, and copper cable theft
have eroded South Africa's state-owned freight rail services which transport
coal to RBCT and other ports. Some miners are using trucks to get their coal to
port instead. read more
RBCT exported 22,057,587 tonnes of coal in the first five months
of 2022. At that rate, RBCT will again see a drop in annual exports after its
2021 tonnages were the lowest since 1996.