China needs Russian coal. Moscow needs new customers

The content originally appeared on: CNN

Hong Kong
CNN Business

China is buying record amounts of cheap Russian coal, even as Western nations slam Moscow with sanctions over the invasion of Ukraine.

In April, not only did the world’s second largest economy buy more coal from Russia than ever before, it also eliminated import tariffs on all types of coal, a move analysts say will mainly benefit Russian suppliers.

China’s coal imports from Russia nearly doubled between March and April, reaching 4.42 million metric tons, according to trade data from Refinitiv. Russia has overtaken Australia as China’s second biggest supplier since last year and now accounts for 19% of its coal imports, up from the 14% share it had in March.

The booming coal trade boosts both sides. Despite bold pledges to tackle the climate crisis, China is now focused on getting its economy out of a slump and needs coal to fuel power stations and make steel for infrastructure projects. Russia desperately needs new customers for its fossil fuels as they are shunned by the West.

China, the world’s top buyer of coal, promised in 2020 to go carbon neutral by 2060. But after severe power shortages hit millions of households and businesses late last year, it ramped up its consumption of coal.

Coal imports soared 64% in 2021, anddomestic output hit a record 4.13 billion metric tons. This year, these numbers are expected to be even higher as President Xi Jinping prioritizes infrastructure investments to revive the economy.

Last month, Chinaimported a record 1.09 million metric tons of seaborne coking coal from Russia, up 10% on April last year, according to Matthew Boyle, lead dry bulk analyst at data firm Kpler. Coking coal is used to make steel.

Coal trade between China and Russia declined shortly after Moscow invaded Ukraine in February and Western countries started hitting Russia with unprecedented sanctions. Chinese banks were initially reluctant to provide financing for purchases of Russian commodities, according to Reuters.

“After Russia started the assault, Chinese and many other buyers initially scaled back purchases to assess the risk of secondary sanctions,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst at Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, a Helsinki-based think tank.

By March, that reluctance had evaporated.

“When it became clear that the EU wasn’t moving fast to ban imports, and that effectively prevented both the US and the EU from imposing broader sanctions that would affect other buyers, there was a jump in purchases resulting from latent demand,” Myllyvirta said.

The European Union has since approved a ban on Russian coal, which is set to take full effect from August. Earlier this month, it also proposed to ban all Russian oil imports within six months.

China is not only buying a lot of Russian coal now — it is also buying it at a big discount.

Russia is the world’s third largest coal exporter and global prices of the commodity have surged since it invaded Ukraine. The price ofICE Newcastle coal futures have risen more than 40% since the start of March.

“In recent months, sanctions have created a stark bifurcation of the global seaborne coal market, as many importers are now unable or unwilling to import coal from Russia,” said Toby Hassall, lead analyst for Coal Market Research at London Stock Exchange Group.

As the pool of buyers gets smaller, those importers who are able and willing to buy coal from Russia are “paying much lower prices for this supply compared with coal sourced from other origins,” Hassall said.

In April, premium Russian coking coal delivered to Jingtang port in northern China was priced at 2,710 yuan ($403) per metric ton, according to Chinese industry data provider MySteel. That compared with $475 for US coking coal reaching the port, and $423 for coal mined in China.

The price discounts have persisted this month.

By late last week, Russian coking coal at northern China ports averaged about $439 per metric ton, according to Hangzhou-based data provider Hithink Flush Information. Australian coal cost $512, and Chinese coal $496.

To Beijing, buying more from Russia is not only a friendly gesture to Moscow, but also a smart move that benefits China’s own economic needs.

“So far, the government seems to be walking a line of maintaining friendly relationships with Russia without encouraging or directing Chinese firms to increase business with the country, and discouraging anything that might run afoul of the sanctions imposed on China,” Myllyvirta said.

“This line does mean that China’s imports from Russia are likely to grow simply on market basis, as other buyers move to embargo Russian fossil fuels,” he said.

See also

Despite the pledges to cut its dependence on fossil fuels, China still needscoal to power its economy. As much as 60% of China’s electricity output was generated from thermal coal in 2021, while more than 90% of Chinese steel was produced in blast furnaces that burn coking coal. In general, coal made up 56% of China’s total energy use as of last year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

“The Chinese government is currently pushing for all kinds of infrastructure and construction projects, which includes coal industry projects, to offset the effect of the real estate slump and Covid lockdowns on other parts of the economy,” said Myllyvirta.

China has been trying to boost coal production since last year, when a severe power crisis triggered blackouts for millions of households and forced many factories to cut production.

On Thursday, Premier Li Keqiang said that a steady supply of power is critical for China’s growth goals.

China will “resolutely” prevent any power crunch from happening again this year, Li said during a visit to a power transmission center in Yunnan province, China.

The National Energy Administration has set Chinese mines a target of 4.4 billion tons this year, up 300 million on last year’s record output.

And in another effortto guarantee supply, the government cut all import tariffs on coal to zero between May 1 this year and March 30, 2023. Previously, tariffs ranged from 3% to 6%, depending on the type of coal.

Indonesia, China’s current No.1 supplier, has enjoyed zero tariffs for years thanks to a free trade pact between China and ASEAN nations. But Russia was still subject to tariffs until this month.

“We estimate a 30% increase in [Russia’s] export volume to China to 71 million tonnes this year vs. 55 million tonnes in 2021,” Morgan Stanley analysts said in a research note last month.

A new bridge between China and Russia might help with that. The first railway bridge linking the two countries was completed last month. The 2,215-meter-long bridge will be mainly used to transport coal, iron ore, and other goods from Russia to China, according to Chinese state media.


Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

1:25 Prime Minister Davis’ Contribution to the Speech From The Throne Debate
0:29 Update 2 PMH Technical Outage
22:33 West Grand Bahama and Bimini welcome PM Davis and candidate Kingsley Smith as they arrive in Freeport…
22:33 West Grand Bahama and Bimini in the hundreds welcome PM Davis and candidate Kingsley Smith as they arrive in Freeport…
22:30 Bahamas Flying Ambassadors Continue Halloween Fly-In Series to Abaco
22:20 Youth Minister tells the young, “never settle for your last achievement”: be willing to aspire to something not yet achieved
22:17 ALICIA WALLACE: The country’s real power problem
22:11 John Watling Distillery, Ltd. Expands Reach to the United States
21:53 EDITORIAL: As FTX saga unfolds, we need to hear the full story
20:57 ‘Remediation work has begun’ at a BPL diesel spill in Nicholls Town, Andros
20:54 Bahamas Power and Light signs industrial agreement with the Bahamas Electrical Utility Managerial Union
19:39 Govt spending over $1m to modernise and revamp website
19:32 The FNM ‘is fine just the way we are right now’, says leader on party convention
16:00 Royal Caribbean’s PI club in DEPP construction go-ahead
16:00 Gas leak victim’s damages cut 77%
16:00 FTX Bahamas: ‘Major progress’ in Ray talks
15:34 Female Atlantis worker stabbed at work by fellow employee
13:23 Minnis accuses Gov’t of ‘causing’ EU blacklisting
13:12 Minnis contradicts Wynn on Goodman’s Bay easement
13:07 North Andros ‘to get power relief’ from BPL
3:12 Safaree Shocked By Amara La Negra’s Crude Text About Vonshae’s Child On LHH Miami
2:21 CI Gibson High Achievers Get Cash Gifts from Marathon MP
19:25 Three die from Nassau Village on motorbikes in one week!
16:47 Minister Sweeting visits schools in the Family Islands during Local Government Junior Council elections process
21:22 EDITORIAL The Concept of Democracy
21:17 Life and Legacy of Obie Wilchcombe Honoured — MP’s pay special tribute in HOA
19:55 Former St. Anne’s student Tony Scriven died in an Industrial Accident on Sweetings Cay this morning…
19:55 Former St. Anne’s student and WSc employee Tony Scriven died in an Industrial Accident on Sweetings Cay this morning
18:58 Department of Information Technology arrested in gun raid!
17:28 QUEEN’S COLLEGE HEADBOY Dario Anthony Rahming Jr collapsed and died this morning during a school practise…
2:41 Proprietor of Cedar Crest and Yager Ruby Braithwaite Murdoch Hill passes…
1:40 Obediah Hercules Wilchcombe
0:25 An educator from Eleuthera was charged after being accused of touching a young female student…
0:17 $30m capitalisation approved for Bahamas Development Bank
0:11 Events to be held across the nation for National Youth Month
0:05 Former attorney jailed for 18 months
0:03 Not guilty plea to murder, attempted murder charges
0:02 Man charged with indecent assault
23:51 Another bad accident tonight outside the Killarney Headquarters!!!
23:28 NASTY male charged with sexual intercourse with his two younger siblings ages 6 and 9 – WELL WHAT IS DIS?
22:13 Clubs & Societies: September 29, 2023
21:58 DIANE PHILLIPS: Creative solutions needed to address society’s inequities
21:51 ONE ELEUTHERA FOUNDATION – Planning needed to preserve our distinct Bahamian culture
20:54 RODNEY “EAGLE” ALVIN GREEN
20:49 Melvin Joseph Forbes
20:39 KENNETH “JAKEY BOY” WILLIAMS
20:24 EDITORIAL: By-election discussions reveals respect for Obie
20:10 SHERWIN “SHIRE” BRANVILLE BARTLETT
20:08 Campbell applauds draft cannabis bill, says input from farmers necessary
20:02 A Government In Mourning — Veteran Broadcaster and Political Giant Dies
19:58 Bahamian Delegation At 78th UN General Assembly
19:48 THE GOSPEL OF “NO” — Mitchell Rejects ‘No’ on Climate Change and Reparations
19:44 Ferguson Returns As BPSU President
19:43 Port Lucaya Marketplace struggling to attract guests despite cruise passenger numbers
19:39 Mitchell, CARICOM Heads plead for UN Resolution on Haiti
19:33 Tourism Arrivals Reach 6 Million Mark
19:32 EDITORIAL FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
19:21 Ambassador Jones Remembers Colleague
19:17 Ratheno Octavis Strachan
19:11 Senators Remember Wilchcombe — Wilchcombe Once Held Senator Seat
19:03 Nurse Recruitment Underway Says PHA Managing Director
19:02 No Shortage of Meds, Just Delays Says PHA
19:00 Two Murders One Day Apart — Murder Count Up 3 Notches
18:50 Merrill Eloise Rolle
18:27 UN Fellows Meet President of the 78th Session of the United Nations General Assembly
18:19 Wynn agrees to ‘quashing’ first penthouse approvals
18:15 ‘Lucrative prospects’: ArawakX refutes $2.4m insolvency woes
18:13 Howard Timothy Martin
18:10 AG brands The Bahamas’ insolvency regime ‘a joke’
18:09 Hanna-Martin Denies Cuban Teachers Can’t Speak English
18:05 Thousands Attend British Colonial Job Fair
17:48 Frederick Nigel Bowe
15:34 Grammy winning icon Sting to kick off Bahamas Culinary & Arts Festival presented by Baha Mar
14:58 International Culture, Wine & Food Festival has got next
14:45 Murray comes through for the Smokies
14:35 Wesley Rolle Invitational gets underway today
13:21 FNM claims Saudi loan agreement signed contrary to law
13:10 ‘No politics in wake of Obie’s death’
12:56 Davis is acting minister of social services
12:47 Many farmers excited about the prospect of growing cannabis, Campbell says
12:46 Ferguson unofficial winner of BPSU votes
12:39 Caribbean ‘must be united’ in climate change fight
12:37 In Grenada, PM calls for action on climate change fight
12:31 Bain apologises for Daxon’s message shared about Obie Wilchcombe
12:27 Man accused of molesting his sisters
12:24 INGRAHAM TO FNM: Sit out by-election . . . but party will run after decision by council members
12:18 Court upholds convictions, sentence of Abaco businessman on drugs, firearms charges
12:08 Improving food security 
12:02 A trinity returning home: Richie Adderley, Nathalee Martinborough, Obie Wilchcombe
11:54 The measure of a man 
4:38 Man shot dead in First Street and Poinciana The Grove Tuesday evening…
3:58 Bahamas Harvest Church Hosts Nurses Recognition Luncheon 
3:35 PM DAVIS: “We cannot leave COP28 without Pledges for Loss & Damage”
21:40 U.S. Embassy Selects USG Alumna Lakeisha Rolle to Receive $20,000 to Empower Young Entrepreneurs
20:24 BAHAMAS AND KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA EXECUTE LOAN AGREEMENT FOR FAMILY ISLAND AIRPORT DEVELOPMENT
20:08 STATESIDE: While Biden tries to appear as ‘labour’s best friend’ Trump seems to lose favour
20:00 FRONT PORCH: The neglect and needs of Caribbean and Pacific states
19:17 PHA confirms 145 infections of dengue fever with six hospitalised
19:13 Dr Rolle: PHA dealing with shortage of cancer medicine and nurses
18:13 ‘BISX home makes sense’ for Bahamas carbon credits