logo
#

Latest news with #Huadian

China likely to ditch low-grade coal from Indonesia due to glut
China likely to ditch low-grade coal from Indonesia due to glut

Business Times

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Times

China likely to ditch low-grade coal from Indonesia due to glut

CHINA is likely to cut imports of the lowest grades of coal as a glut of the fuel makes the trade uneconomic and the government tightens up on carbon emissions. It's a move that would weigh most heavily on suppliers in Indonesia. China's benchmark price of thermal coal has slumped to a four-year low, a product of record domestic production and a binge on imports in recent years. Power demand hasn't kept up as the economy has slowed, while renewables are shouldering more of the burden of electricity generation. Coal imports fell year-on-year for a third straight month in May, and the decline is likely to accelerate over the rest of 2025, Li Xuegang, an analyst at the China Coal Transportation and Distribution Association, said on Wednesday. The government's 'tighter emission controls will slash demand for low-heating and poor-quality grades,' Li told industry representatives at the annual Coaltrans event in Beijing. Over the past three years, China has stepped up imports of lignite, or brown coal, from its biggest overseas provider Indonesia, blending the lower calorie and heavily polluting fuel with higher grades for use in power stations. That trade has come unstuck as prices have dropped and utilities are able to source better-quality supplies more cheaply. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies. Sign Up Sign Up The shift away from the worst kind of coal would also represent progress at the margins for the country's ambitions to reduce emissions to meet its climate goals. China Huadian, one of the country's biggest power generators, expects total imports to slide to about 400 million tons this year, from the record 543 million tons purchased in 2024, according to Zhang Aipei, deputy director of production. Purer, high-calorie grades should be enough to fill any seasonal or regional gaps in supply, he told the Coaltrans conference. Coal demand more generally is holding up, however, putting the government's pledge to start reducing consumption from next year in doubt. Having endured a spate of economy-crippling blackouts earlier this decade, China has greenlit a massive expansion of coal-fired power capacity to lock-in security of supply. Moreover, electricity consumption is likely to get a boost from the rollout of data centres, and the expansion of green and high-tech manufacturing, while coal is also finding other outlets for demand from the chemicals sector, according to other speakers at the conference. Domestic production, which topped 4.7 billion tons last year, is China's main source of supply. Huadian's Zhang said he doesn't expect that to peak until 2027. BLOOMBERG

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store