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China's coal imports in September rose to a nine-month high

Customs data released on Monday showed that China's imports of coal rose to their highest level in nine months, as domestic coal prices increased, making imported coal more affordable. However, shipments were still below the levels seen a year ago.

China's General Administration of Customs reported that the country imported 46 million metric tonnes of coal last month.

The decline in prices on the international market was responsible for the lower total of last month compared to September, when it was a record high. This record was broken in November. September 2024 is now the second highest month ever.

The rapid rise in domestic coal prices during the second half has made imported coal more attractive. The main reason for the rapid recovery of imports is this price advantage, said Feng Dongbin. Vice general manager at consultancy Fenwei Digital Information Technology.

The tightening of supply has helped boost prices in the domestic market. Inner Mongolia, China’s largest coal producing region, closed 15 mines after they exceeded the allotted production.

The highest thermal power generation in August, mainly from coal, has been recorded since 1998.

The data showed that China's imports of coal fell by 11% in the first nine-month period, to 345.89 millions tons. Colleen howe, Christian Schmollinger (Editing)

(source: Reuters)