Mongolia vows to clean up coal trade after fury over China deals
25 Jan 2023
Mongolia’s government will
auction coal on the stock exchange after scandal involving underground coal
sales.
Last month, protestors stormed
the Mongolian capital to denounce corruption in the country’s
coal trade. Now the government says it has a solution to put a stop to years of
shady business deals.
Starting next
month, Erdenes-Tavantolgoi JSC — the country’s largest state-owned coal miner —
will cease signing direct sales contracts with buyers in neighbouring China,
which last year purchased 84 percent of Mongolia’s total exports. Instead, the
company’s coal will be auctioned on the Mongolian Stock Exchange.
The move to sell coal
contracts through the exchange comes in response to large-scale protests against
corruption in Ulaanbaatar in December, triggered by allegations of widespread
fraud in the coal industry.
Erdenes-Tavantolgoi
JSC was at the centre of the allegations — its chief executive Gankhuyag
Battulga and several associates as well as family members have been arrested
and await trial, accused of embezzling billions of dollars in coal revenue.
Authorities say the auctions will improve transparency and ultimately net
higher returns for the state.
The government
had planned to start the bidding process later this year but expedited the
process following public outcry over corruption.
“Instead of
waiting for half a year we will have it traded online starting in February and
the Mongolian Stock Exchange is going to handle that,” Batnairamdal, Mongolia’s
vice minister for mining and heavy industry, told Al Jazeera. “This will help
give us experience in selling coal on an online platform.”
Sandwiched between Russia
and China, Mongolia is one of the world’s most sparsely populated countries
with 3.3 million people spread across a landscape slightly smaller than Alaska.
In 2021, the country had a gross domestic product (GDP) per capita of about
$4,500, similar to that of Indonesia. Mining accounts for roughly a quarter of
the country’s GDP, according to the Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative. About half of its export revenue comes from coal.
The contracts
apply to coal exported through the Gashuunsukhait border post, located about
240km (150 miles) south of the Tavan Tolgoi coal deposit in the Gobi Desert. In
addition to Erdenes-Tavantolgoi, affected companies include Energy Resources
LLC, whose parent company Mongolian Mining Corp is listed on the Hong Kong
Stock Exchange.
Both companies
excavate coal at Tavan Tolgoi, one of the world’s largest coking and thermal
coal deposits, with 6.4 billion tonnes of reserves. The coal from Tavan Tolgoi
is highly prized in China, where it is used in the production of steel.
China is the
world’s largest steel producer, accounting for approximately 57 percent of the
world’s steel production. But it cannot produce enough coking coal domestically
to meet the needs of its steel factories.
In 2022, China
imported 170.71 million tonnes of coal, according to data from China’s General
Administration of Customs. Mongolia supplied 31.2 million tonnes, about 18
percent of the total.
Mongolia’s
coking coal has become especially valued in recent years as China has dialled
back its reliance on Australian coal following a sharp deterioration in
relations between the countries.
Earlier this
month, the stock exchange organised a trial run trade to test the new system —
12,800 tonnes of coking coal was auctioned to a Singapore-based coal
transporter. The final call price had increased 12.2 percent above the original
asking price, from 1,150 to 1,290 Chinese yuan ($170-$190) per tonne.