Australia’s Resourcehouse Signs $60 Bln Deal With China

Mercredi, février 17th, 2010

Australian miner Resourcehouse said Saturday it had signed a $60 billion coal deal with China, describing it as the country’s « biggest-ever export contract », reported AFP.

Resourcehouse chairman Clive Palmer said the company had negotiated a 20-year agreement to supply China Power International Development (CPI) with 30 million tonnes of coal per year from a proposed mine in central Queensland.

Palmer, Australia’s fifth-richest man, said he had awarded the engineering and construction management contract for the thermal coal mine, named « China First » to Metallurgical Corp of China (MCC).

The Export-Import Bank of China had financed a six billion dollar loan, Palmer said, but emphasised the project was 100 percent Australian-owned.

Executive director Phil McNamara said the « once-in-a-century project, » which is expected to begin construction later this year, would include open-cut and underground mines and a 495-kilometre (308-mile) rail line.

Palmer plans to float Resourcehouse on the Hong Kong stock exchange next month in a bid to raise up to three billion dollars for coal, iron ore and oil and gas projects in Australia and oil and gas exploration in Papua New Guinea.

Source : Konaxis



Huge coal reserve in Xinjiang march imports up 37.4%

Jeudi, avril 16th, 2009

China’s coal imports have been increasing for five months, hitting a record 5.72 million tons in March, up 37.4 percent from a year earlier, as suppliers took advantage of cheap shipping and the lack of an annual deal between China’s big power firms and coal miners.

The coal importation data, published by China’s General Administration of Customs, showed that the last peak was 5.67 million tons in February 2007.

« The surge in coal imports is mostly because prices in the international markets are cheaper. It’s likely that both thermal coal and coking coal imports rose in March, » said Henry Liu, an analyst at Macquarie Bank.

While China has been heavily importing coal the search for more reserves has also been going on and recently, huge coal reserve was found in China’s Uigur region.

A 3-billion-ton coal reserve is discovered in Aiding Lake, Xinjiang Uigur Autonomous Region in northeast China, according to the state news agency Xinhua.

The coalfield has a perimeter of 16 by 10 km including the lake. The coal bed can reach as much as 10-22 meters deep, the Xinjiang Bureau of Coal Geology said.

The bureau started exploration of the country’s lowest altitude lake in February. It found the coal reserve at the end of March but just announced its findings in early April.

The findings could be an indication that more coal exists in areas surrounding the lake, which could bring the total reserve in the region to 27 billion tons. Local geologists were still exploring the region.

Aiding Lake, Uygur for « Moonlight », lies 30 km southeast of Turpan city and has a water surface of seven square kilometers. It is the world’s second-lowest lake after the Dead Sea in the Middle East.

China’s lowest inland point at 154.31 meters below the sea level lies in the lake.

Source : Konaxis



Shenhua’s 2009 CAPEX cut by 16%

Vendredi, avril 10th, 2009
China’s   Shenhua Energy Co, the world’s biggest coal producer by market value, cuts  its  2009  capital spending by 16 percent for 2009 owing to  falling power demand  resulting from the global financial crisis.

The  29.9 billion yuan ($4.37 billion) allotted  for capital expenditure in 2009,  is less than the  35.8 billion yuan a year ago, the company’s annual report said.

Shenhua’s president Ling Wen told reporters at a media briefing that the firm has signed agreements with the country’s power plants for domestic long-term contract sales, but declined to disclose the price.

« The contracts so far that have been signed are very satisfactory from our point of view, » Ling said. « Whether it is from a quantity or price point of view, we are confident that our sales target will be met. »

Shenhua has agreed to offer State-owned conglomerate China Resources Group 85 million tons of thermal coal over the next five years,  it was reported.

China’s coal miners have come under pressure to lower prices by the country’s power generators, which chose to import  coal at cheaper prices, worsening the oversupply at home.

But Ling said « the increase in imported coal will not affect the Chinese market, » as the volume of imported coal is still very small relative to China’s total coal consumption.

Shenhua’s sales in the first quarter of this year are « better than our expectations, » Ling said, but he did not give details. Sales from China, the world’s top consumer of the fuel, account for about 91 percent of the firm’s total coal sales.

China’s coal miners are suffering from  weaker prices as weakening industrial activity in the country  reduces  demand for the fuel. But analysts say that Shenhua, which has locked in 83 percent of its coal revenue from contract sales, is more insulated from the sharper fall in spot prices than rivals Yanzhou Coal and China Coal Energy.

The coal maker forecasts its commercial coal sales volume to reach 220 million tons in 2009 against sales of 232.7 million tons in 2008.

Chairman Zhang Xiwu said the company’s railway segment will be the major growth driver for the firm. Shenhua will allocate 7.6 billion yuan to develop its rail business this year, compared to 2.5 billion yuan in 2008.

Shenhua, China’s largest coal producer and exporters, foresees a slight decline in  China’s coal export volume in 2009.

In 2008, coal export volume  already fell by 11.7 percent  from the previous year. Export selling prices reached 577.2 yuan per ton, a 45 percent increase from the previous year.

According to Shenhua said the increase in demand for coal in the Asia-Pacific market this year will be mainly from India.

Source : Konaxis



China’s coal imports in feb highest in 22 months

Vendredi, mars 20th, 2009
China’s  February  coal imports sharply rose  by  73% year on year to  reach 4.88 million tons, the highest volume recorded in the last 22 months, or an increase of 63%  combined with  January, according to statistics released by China’s General Administration of Customs (GAC).

Experts  identified  the factors  for the surge in the amount of coal imported by China, the largest coal producer and consumer in the world, to declining international coal prices, lower shipping costs and high domestic coal prices.

The disagreement between domestic utilities companies and coal miners over the contract coal price for 2009  added to the preference of  utilities to buy coal from overseas.

Coal imports are expected to continue to climb in March, and likely to fall beginning in April, according to Wang Ling, an analyst with Umetal.com.

Locally,  China Coal Energy Co Ltd   posted 15.89 million tons of coal output for the first two months of this year, a slight year-on-year increase of 0.4%, of which the coke yield was 600,000 tons, up 8.3% from the previous year, according to the firm.

In January and February, the company’s trade volume for coal hit 11.58 million tons, declining 16.7% from a year earlier.

Domestic coal sales reached 10.92 million tons, a year-on-year decrease of 7.9%. Sales for steam coal and coke amounted to 10.66 million tons and 260,000 tons, down 7.5% and 23.5% from a year earlier, sources reported.

Coal exports in January and February was only  120,000 tonsl, 81.8% less than in the same period of the previous year. Agent exports were 540,000 tons, plummeting 60.5% less than in the same period of the previous year.

Meanwhile, China has discovered a new 1,400 square-kilometre Sha’erhu coal field containing more than 13 billion tonnes of proven coal reserves in the northwestern region of  Xinjiang. The coal was tested to be  suitable for power generation and gas conversion, the report said.

According to the local prospecting bureau,  total reserves could eventually reach a total of 64 billion tonnes.

The new find raises the total estimated reserves in Shanshan County stand at around 240 billion tonnes, according to the China News Service.

Source : Konaxis