
China July coal imports fall 23% on ample domestic supply
July coal imports were 35.61 million metric tons. While down from the year-earlier level, that represented a recovery from June's more than two-year low as hotter weather spurred higher air conditioning demand, supporting electricity consumption.
Looking forward, the market is weighing whether China will take concrete steps to scale back production and curb domestic oversupply.
A National Energy Administration document dated July 20 called for inspections at coal mines in eight provinces, leading coking coal prices to rise by the trading limit in successive sessions on expectations that the inspections would lead to supply disruptions.
"Such a move by the NEA, if carried out, presents substantial upside risk to domestic coal prices given the potential for a reduction in local production," LSEG coal analysts said in a note.
"This in turn poses upside risk to seaborne coal import prices because of the import price arbitrage dynamic, which is the primary determinant of China's demand for imports."
Analysts at data analytics firm Kpler said in a report that the NEA directive had only temporarily boosted prices and imports while the broader fundamentals pointed in the opposite direction.
"The overall outlook remains bearish due to continued domestic output growth, rising renewables, and weakening steel demand."
For the first seven months of the year, coal imports were down 13% at 257.3 million tons, the customs data showed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Chinese state media says Nvidia H20 chips not safe for China
BEIJING, Aug 10 (Reuters) - Nvidia's (NVDA.O), opens new tab H20 chips pose security concerns for China, a social media account affiliated with China's state media said on Sunday, after Beijing raised concerns over backdoor access in those chips. The H20 chips are also not technologically advanced or environmentally friendly, the account, Yuyuan Tantian, which is affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV, said in an article published on WeChat. "When a type of chip is neither environmentally friendly, nor advanced, nor safe, as consumers, we certainly have the option not to buy it," the article concluded. Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment. H20 artificial intelligence chips were developed by Nvidia for the Chinese market after the U.S. imposed export restrictions on advanced AI chips in late 2023. The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump banned their sales in April amid escalating trade tensions with China, but reversed the ban in July. China's cyberspace watchdog said on July 31 that it had summoned Nvidia to a meeting, asking the U.S. chipmaker to explain whether its H20 chips had any backdoor security risks - a hidden method of bypassing normal authentication or security controls. Nvidia later said its products had no "backdoors" that would allow remote access or control. In its article, Yuyuan Tantian said Nvidia chips could achieve functions including "remote shutdown" through a hardware "backdoor." Yuyuan Tantian's comment followed criticism against Nvidia by People's Daily, another Chinese state media outlet. In a commentary earlier this month, People's Daily said Nvidia must produce "convincing security proofs" to eliminate Chinese users' worries over security risks in its chips and regain market trust.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
China wants US to relax AI chip-export controls for trade deal, FT reports
Aug 10 (Reuters) - China wants the United States to ease export controls on chips critical for artificial intelligence as part of a trade deal before a possible summit between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. Chinese officials have told experts in Washington that Beijing wants the Trump administration to relax export restrictions on high-bandwidth memory chips, the newspaper reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter. The White House, State Department and China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the report. HBM chips, which help perform data-intensive AI tasks quickly, are closely watched by investors due to their use alongside AI graphic processors, particularly Nvidia's (NVDA.O), opens new tab. The FT said China is concerned because the U.S. HBM controls hamper the ability of Chinese companies such as Huawei to develop their own AI chips. Successive U.S. administrations have curbed exports of advanced chips to China, looking to stymie Beijing's AI and defence development. While this has impacted U.S. firms' ability to fully address booming demand from China, one of the world's largest semiconductor markets, it still remains an important revenue driver for American chipmakers.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
China wants US to relax chip-export controls as part of trade deal, FT reports
Aug 10 (Reuters) - China wants the United States to ease export controls on a critical component for artificial intelligence chips as part of a trade deal ahead of a possible summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.