Japan Signs Its Most Expensive Coal Supply Deal Ever
28 Jul 2022
Japan’s
Nippon Steel Corporation has signed an agreement with mining and trading giant
Glencore for thermal coal supply at $375 per ton in what is likely one of the
highest prices a Japanese firm has paid for the commodity ever, sources
familiar with the deal told Bloomberg on
Wednesday.
As
coal prices are soaring amid a global energy crunch and bans on Russia’s coal
exports in the West, customers around the world are paying record-high prices
for coal and are using more coal as they switch from expensive gas, where the
market is even tighter.
The
price in the Nippon Steel-Glencore agreement for coal supply until March 2023
is three times higher than the price of similar supply deals signed last year,
one of Bloomberg’s sources says.
Japan,
a major importer of energy commodities, is looking to secure supply amid
soaring coal and gas prices and utilities switching to coal from gas where
possible to conserve gas. Japan is on the brink of an energy crisis as
it is forced to tackle a combination of a weak local currency, the fallout from
the Ukraine war, and summer heatwaves.
At
the beginning of the summer, the Japanese government called on households
and companies to conserve as much electricity as possible this summer, seeking
to prevent blackouts as spare power reserve capacity is expected to drop to
critically low levels. The nationwide energy-conservation effort will be
implemented from July 1 to September 30, amid concerns that Japan’s power
system may not handle demand in peak summer.
Companies
and countries importing energy commodities face surging coal prices as Europe
restarts mothballed coal-fired power plants to conserve gas with the high
uncertainty over Russian gas supply. The global coal benchmark, Australia Newcastle Coal futures,
hit $414 on ICE Futures Europe early on Wednesday, while coal futures for 2023
in Europe soared to a record high on Tuesday after Russia said