Mongolia’s daily met coal shipments to China peak in June as lockdowns ease
04 Jul 2022
The number
of trucks carrying metallurgical coal into China in June rose to the highest
level in 2022, as COVID-19 movement restrictions eased in the country, industry
sources said June 30.
Daily coal
hauls to China reached the year’s peak at about 820 trucks in the week started
June 27, the latest data from investment bank Founder CIFCO showed.
Land border
ports of Ganqimaodu and Mandura accounted for most of the truck traffic.
The number
of trucks has more than doubled since May, when the daily Mongolian coal haul
to China averaged 400 trucks, CIFCO’s data showed.
A resurgence
of COVID-19 had disrupted truck inflows in February, with just 23 trucks moving
coal from Mongolia to China, down sharply from about 100 trucks in January.
Mongolia has
emerged as the top coking coal supplier to China in the absence of Australian
coal. However, tight pandemic controls on both side of the China-Mongolia
border impeded supplies in 2021.
Mongolia’s
coal exports to China are expected to rise further in the near term, helping
ease tight domestic met coal supplies in the country, according to CIFCO.
Met coal
stocks at Chinese independent coking producers were at 9.80 million mt in the
week to June 24, down 500,000 mt week on week, data from Huajin Securities
showed.
Meanwhile,
stocks at key Chinese steel producers slipped 10,000 mt on the week to 8.78
million mt.
The
inventories at these key producers are expected to last for about 13 days,
according to Huajin Securities.
Domestic situation
Chinese
coking sector’s profit margins have been squeezed, with coking producers
anticipating an unfavorable outlook in the near term, Huajin Securities said.
Market
players have adopted a wait-and-watch stance, leading to muted buying interest
and bids in met coal supply tenders, according to Huajin Securities.
Henan-based
key Chinese met coal producer Pingdingshan Tianan Coal Mining Co. said June 29
that it was temporarily halting exports due to insufficient coking coal inflows
to meet required demand.
The producer
set 2022 refined coal output at 12.35 million mt, up from 11.88 million mt in
2021. It has contracted to sell 13 million mt in 2022.
Another key
met coal producer Shanxi-based Wintime Energy recently said it is aiming to
hike its future coking coal output capacity.
Wintime in a
filing to the Shanghai Stock Exchange said China was short on met coal
resources, with domestic reserves meeting only 20%-25% of local needs.
China’s met
coal supply is expected to remain tight for the next three-five years with
prices elevated, as future new capacity estimated at just 30 million mt/year is
not enough to cover domestic demand, Wintime said.
The producer
is aiming to speed up the construction of its four coal mines in Shanxi’s
Qinyang county that have a total 1.5 million mt/year of mined coal capacity.
The new mines will bump up the producer’s met coal capacity to 11 million
mt/year, from 9.9 million mt/year currently, according to Wintime. The timeline
to complete these projects remains unknown.
Wintime has
coal reserves estimated at 3.83 billion mt and it owns 13 running coal mines.
Guotai Junan
Futures, a unit of Guotai Junan Securities, said Chinese met coal demand is
expected to receive strong support in the long term, as Chinese authorities
pushed back decarbonization targets for the steel sector to 2030, from