Login Register Contact Us
Welcome to Linkage e-Auctions Welcome to Coal Trading Portal

Coal news and updates

Indonesia, Australia face limits in coal exports to Europe ahead of Russian ban

07 Apr 2022

Indonesia and Australia, among the world’s top coal exporters, have hit their production limits and are unlikely to meet Europe’s demand for additional supplies if the European Union bans Russian coal imports, mining executives said on Wednesday.


The European Commission proposed on Tuesday new sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, including a ban on buying Russian coal and on Russian ships entering EU ports, and said it was working on banning oil imports too.


The EU depends on Russia for around 45% of its coal imports, according to the European Commission website.


Before the EU proposal, some European buyers had already held talks with Indonesian miners in March as they sought to replace Russian supplies, a senior executive of Indonesia Coal Miners Association (ICMA) said.


“Miners cannot just increase production that quickly, it’s difficult and the capacity is already very tight,” ICMA chairman Pandu Sjahrir told Reuters on Wednesday.


Indonesia’s government this year targeted output of 663 million tonnes, a goal miners are already struggling to meet as unexpected export restrictions in January and prolonged wet weather hit output.


The country also has tightened supervision over its mandatory domestic sales after stocks fell to a critical low at local power generators.


The energy ministry estimated that Indonesia’s coal exports in January-March totalled 37.64 million tonnes, compared with 53.77 million tonnes in the same period last year.


In addition, European markets require mostly middle- to- high-grade coal while most Indonesian miners produce lower-grade coal, Hendra Sinadia, executive director of ICMA said. Freight costs for Indonesian coal to Europe are also not competitive versus other suppliers, he added.


The few miners who might have the space to expand their output will require government approval for additional production and exports, Hendra said. Such requests are typically submitted in April-June.


Indonesia’s monthly coal benchmark price has already surged to a record $288.40 per tonne for April due to high global demand.