Load shedding pushes up thermal coal prices

Prompt cargoes from Richards Bay coal terminal have jumped 9 percent to $67 since the start of the month as rolling blackouts threaten mining output and port loading. Photo: Simphiwe Mbokazi

Prompt cargoes from Richards Bay coal terminal have jumped 9 percent to $67 since the start of the month as rolling blackouts threaten mining output and port loading. Photo: Simphiwe Mbokazi

Published May 7, 2015

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Henning Gloystein Singapore

POWER blackouts in South Africa and soaring Indian imports in anticipation of an El Nino climatic event have pushed thermal coal prices in the Indian and Pacific Ocean basin up since the beginning of the month, raising their premium over European cargoes.

Prompt cargoes from Richards Bay terminal have jumped 9 percent to $67 (R802) a ton since the beginning of the month as rolling power blackouts threaten mining output and port loading.

Prompt cargoes from Australia’s Newcastle terminal last settled at $64.95 a ton, up from $62.30 at the start of the month.

Prices were also driven up by rising demand in India, where utilities are stocking up on coal in preparation for an El Nino weather event that could affect rain levels during the monsoon season.

Last year, India’s hydro levels were very low because of insufficient rainfall during monsoon, triggering a coal shortage as utilities scrambled to replace hydro-power with other fuels for electricity generation. “A forecast of a strong El Nino and therefore the possibility of a deficient monsoon will be noted even more after the disastrous effect on the power sector in 2014,” energy brokerage Marex Spectron said yesterday.

“The government now seems determined to avoid the mistakes, and especially the blackouts, of the past years. Coal imports to India have increased considerably since early this year and have meanwhile reached record high levels,” it added.

The brokerage added that India’s imported coal stocks had risen from a low of under a million tons last year to more than 3.5 million tons now.

The price rises mean South Africa’s and Australia’s premium over cargoes delivered into Europe’s ports of Amsterdam, Rotterdam or Antwerp are now at $7.35 and $5.30 a ton respectively. Yet Newcastle coal in particular has been volatile this year – Reuters

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