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Sources say that China, facing a declining coal demand, has asked power plants to simply buy more coal.

Sources with knowledge on the matter say that China is urging its coal-fired plants to stockpile the fuel more and import less to try to stabilize domestic prices. However, traders are skeptical the measures will stop the slide.

After a massive increase in production following shortages and blackouts, the coal industry in China is facing rising stocks of the fuel.

Sources said that to support the miners who are facing a decline in profits, the state planner asked power plants prioritise the domestic coal, and increase thermal stockpiles of coal by 10%. The overall target was 215 million metric tonnes by June 10.

Sources spoke under condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak with the media.

Two sources, both coal dealers, stated that the guidelines were unlikely to encourage much buying or support the price, due to the accumulation of inventories along the supply chain.

National Development and Reform Commission, a powerful state planner and policy maker, did not respond immediately to a request for comment sent by facsimile.

China Energy Daily, a state-run publication, reported that mine stockpiles were up by 42% compared to a year earlier, and port inventories in the northern Bohai region had increased by 25%.

Three sources stated that buyers are being asked to purchase coal from northern port to reduce the high stockpiles of ports.

The NDRC has taken these steps after months of industry groups and companies calling for a reduction in coal production and imports.

However, Chinese coal prices are steadily falling. The price of medium-grade coal, with a heat content of 5,500 kilocalories/kg, was 620 yuan (86 dollars) per metric tonne on Tuesday. This is the lowest price since March 2021.

The prices have dropped so much that some buyers are opting to sell on the spot rather than sign long-term contracts.

China is expected to import a total of 542.7 million tonnes of coal this year, despite the record-breaking amount imported in 2024. In April, coal imports fell 16% on the previous year.

MINES CONTINUE TO WORK

Chinese mine production is growing despite the price collapse, and a government that fears shortages and blackouts in 2021 and 2020 will not consider reducing output.

Toby Hassall, lead coal analyst at LSEG, said: "I believe they are very careful to avoid a repetition of that." "They are willing to tolerate a period of low domestic production."

China's coal output increased 6.6% year-on-year from January to April to 1.58 billion tonnes. Official data released on Tuesday showed that industry profits dropped 48.9% from the previous year for the same time period.

(source: Reuters)