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China's coking coal production rises due to strict safety inspections

Chinese coking prices rose on Thursday, as the recovery of production slowed down in the province of Shanxi. This was in response to a fatal mining accident that occurred in late May and the ongoing strict safety inspections in this coal-rich area.

As of 0333 GMT, the most traded coking coal contract at Dalian Commodity Exchange increased by 0.12% to 1,251 Yuan ($183.72 per metric tons).

The DCE coke contract that was most active gained 0.33%, to 1,953.5 Yuan per ton.

According to a report by Mysteel, the pace of recovery of the production in Shanxi is slowing down, even though the number of coal mines in certain areas that have halted production has increased.

After the fatal?mine accident, which prompted broad and strict safety inspections throughout?China's leading coal production hub?, supply concerns grew.

Prices fell as local coal mining reports indicated that production had gradually returned, easing fears of a shortage.

Investors weighed the prospects of weakening economic fundamentals against firm demand in the short term. Rising supply coincides with faltering consumer demand.

The DCE contract, the most traded iron ore, was up by 0.13% to 744 yuan per ton.

As of 0323 GMT, the benchmark 'July' iron ore price on the Singapore Exchange had remained largely unchanged at $98.3 per tonne.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange are mixed. The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were mixed.

Analysts at Lange Steel said that the daily crude steel production in June will be around 2.7 million tons, as compared to 2.72 million tonnes in May, according to official data.

(source: Reuters)