Rains disrupt ops at Australian coking coal ports
17 Jan 2023
Supply concerns
returned to the seaborne coking coal market after operations at major
Australian ports were disrupted by heavy rains.
An
Australian producer has declared force majeure on some shipments, although the
tonnages affected were not known at the time of writing.
Operations
at the multi-use Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminal (DBCT) have been interrupted since
11 January owing to heavy rains over North Queensland, a logistics source said.
DBCT informed customers that train departures on Tuesday will be suspended,
while all future berthings are delayed until 20 January, logistics sources
said.
Cargo
and berth operations were suspended at DBCT, Hay Point and Abbot Point ports, a
trader in Singapore said. Operations at the ports may slowly pick up should the
weather improve, but disruptions are likely to delay shipments, a buyer from India
said. An Asian steel mill said that it had limited exposure to the risks of
shipment delays given it has accounted for a longer vessel turnover time during
the rainy season in Australia.
"We
have not received any notice about problems with Australian shipments," a
buyer from India said. Another buyer said they did not have any Australian
coals lined up for delivery and as such were not worried about weather-related
delays immediately.
DBCT
and Hay Point are referred to as cargo-assembly ports. This implies that any
delays in shipments from the mine to the port, or in arrival of vessels at the
port for loading, are difficult to offset with the use of stockpiled material.
Over the years, the problem has been less severe, but it still exists, a
Singapore-based trader said. The port of Gladstone is typically able to make up
for delayed mine-to-port deliveries with stockpiled cargoes. Gladstone shipped
62mn t of coal last year, while DBCT shipments were at 52.10mn t. Exports
through Hay Point stood at 46.27mn t, while Abbot Point shipments were 30.56mn
t.
The
northern end of the Bowen Basin and the associated ports of DBCT, Abbot Point
and Hay Point and experienced up to 800mm of rain in the first two weeks of
January, and these ports have longer-than-average
ship queues.
The Argus premium
low-volatile fob Australia index stood at $309.30/t today, up 19.4pc month on
month and down 24.8pc on the year.