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Document shows that coal mines in Inner Mongolia, China have been shut down for exceeding production plans.

Document shows that coal mines in Inner Mongolia, China have been shut down for exceeding production plans.

Inner Mongolia, China’s largest coal producing region, ordered 15 mines halted production after it was found that they had exceeded their approved output plan, according to a document by the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Energy Bureau.

China has launched inspections of major coal hubs and asked local authorities whether the mines have exceeded production in 2024 or the first half 2025. Beijing is trying to combat overcapacity.

The Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Energy Bureau confirmed that the document detailing key details and the results of the region’s production capacity inspection was correct.

In the first half 2025, 15 Ordos mines were found to have exceeded their capacity by 10%. According to the document, they have been told to suspend their operations. They may only resume after passing inspections from regional safety regulators.

The document didn't provide a timetable for the inspections. According to Mysteel a Chinese commodity consultancy firm, the halted mines had a combined annual production capacity of 34.6 million tons.

Five of the fifteen mines with a combined capacity of 19,3 million tonnes per year were ordered by September 16 to suspend production between five and seven days because of safety hazards. According to Mysteel, four mines have resumed normal production since the inspections.

The most traded coking coal contract in China on the Dalian Commodity Exchange increased 5.84% or 68.5 Yuan ($9.63) per ton on Monday.

The market rose after the state-run media reported President Xi Jinping’s Monday call for an "orderly withdrawal" of outdated production capacities and the curbing "disorderly price competition". Reporting by Sam Li in Beijing and Colleen howe, with editing by Emelia Sithole Matarise.

(source: Reuters)