Asian coal prices may fall 20%

Saturday, December 24 2005 - 01:37 AM WIB

Asian contract rates for coal used in power plants may fall more then 20 percent next year as Indonesia and rival mining nations raised ouput after prices surged, The Jakarta Post reported on Saturday, quoting analysts.

Japanese utilities such as Tokyo Electric Power Co. may sign benchmark 2006 purchase contracts at $42 a metric ton or less, from a record of $53 this year, Andrew Harrington, a resources analyst at the Melbourne-based bank, said on Dec. 20. ANZ Bank, Australia's third-largest lender, last week cut its forecast for 2006 contract prices from $49.

Spot prices at Australia's Newcastle, the world's biggest coal-export harbor, have fallen 39 percent from a record $63 in mid-2004, pulled down by rising exports from Indonesia, South Africa and Colombia.

Indonesia this year is set to overtake Australia as the world's biggest exporter of coal used in power plants, the Australian government's commodities forecaster says.

"The main thermal coal exporting countries are all doing as much as they can in terms of exports, so there's been a strong supply response to the high prices," Harrington, 31, said in an interview.

"Anything in the $40s would be seen as quite a good result for next year's price as there's been a pretty strong decline" in spot price, he said.

Coal is the world's second biggest energy source, behind oil and ahead of natural gas. Annual contract prices for thermal coal between Australian producers and Japanese utilities, which run from April 1 to March 31, are yard stick for other markets.

Indonesia may increase coal exports 7 percent next year to 119 million tons, Simon Sembiring, director general of mineral resources at Indonesia's energy ministry, said last week. Asian power-generation coal supplies rose 33 million tons this year, beating demand growth, coal researcher McCloskey Group said on Dec 6.

PT Bumi Resources, Indonesia's largest coal exporter will sell 45 million tons of coal this year, 25 percent more than last year, the Tex Report said on Dec 1, citing the company.

The fall in spot coal prices is likely to discourage Chinese exports and further encourage imports, Deutsche Bank AG said in a Dec 19, report.

Chinese's total coal exports fell 28 percent in November, compared with November last year, while import rose 16 percent, the bank said. Chinese spot export prices fell below domestic prices in December, it said.

Australia's two biggest coal exporting ports, Newcastle and Dalrymple Bay, have introduced export-quota systems to cut queues of ships waiting to load. Miners such as BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto Group and Xstrata Plc export coal through the ports, both of which are expanding capacity to meet higher demand.

Even ANZ Bank's $42 estimate may be difficult to sustain, Harrington said. Contract prices may fall in the year starting April 1, 2007, to $38 and then to $53 the following year, Harrington said.(*)

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