- LNG crunch pushes Newcastle coal index to near 2-year high
- Indonesia output down, policy chaos seen driving exports lower
- El Nino could fuel Asian demand surge
- Russia supply woes add to tightening global coal market
SINGAPORE/BEIJING, June 16 (Reuters) - A deadly mining accident in China's biggest coal-producing region and mounting policy chaos around Indonesian exports are choking global supplies, which analysts and industry officials say could boost prices as liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies remain tight due to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.
The war in Iran halted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz - through which, during normal times, a fifth of global oil and LNG supplies passes - triggering purchases of high-grade coal by Japan and South Korea and pushing the Newcastle benchmark to near two-year highs of over $150 a metric ton.
However, purchases of lower-grade coal - typically from top exporter Indonesia - have been soft due to tepid demand from China and India, which have leaned upon sufficient inventories and renewable output to meet power demand.
That is changing after a fatal explosion at a Shanxi mine last month, analysts say, with the accident triggering sweeping safety inspections in the province and tightening domestic supplies.
China's June thermal coal imports are expected to rise 27.6% from a year earlier to 27.8 million metric tons to meet higher seasonal demand as local supply tightens, DBX Commodities CEO Alexandre Claude said - a substantial increase relative to tepid demand until May.
In addition, Indonesia's plan to bring all coal exports under the control of a new state-run company called Danantara has compounded the uncertainty.
"Shanxi safety curbs, Indonesia's Danantara transition tightened seaborne supply," Claude said. "The inventory cushion has thinned. With demand firm and supply constrained, near-term price risk remains skewed to the upside."
For the first four months of this year, Indonesia's thermal coal production was down 7% from a year earlier, said Scott Dendy, the executive director at McCloskey, a consultancy. He added that exports could decline by about 11% this year to 446 million tons if production tracks current pace.
The disruptions come as Southeast Asian economies that typically buy Indonesian coal are cranking up their coal-fired power capacity.
Hotter weather is driving higher coal use in Vietnam and the Philippines, while tighter gas supplies in Thailand are expected to push imports higher this year, said Vasudev Pamnani, director at India-based I-Energy Resources.
FALLOUT FROM IRAN WAR, EL NINO INCOMING
The fallout from the Iran war alone is expected to drive an additional 70 million tons of coal consumption across the Asia-Pacific region in 2026, consultancy Rystad Energy said in a June note.
While LNG supplies are expected to rise after the U.S. and Iran agreed on a framework to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, officials say a return to normal supply levels will take weeks and getting back to pre-war production levels could take years.
That additional demand comes as global supply is expected to decline 5.7% to 985 million tons in 2026, said Bryan Lim, business development manager at Argus, a consultancy, with analysts expecting an approaching El Nino to further boost demand.
Peng Qihua, associate professor at Nanjing University's School of Atmospheric Sciences, said drought-like conditions in northern China could hurt hydropower output and hotter weather could drive air-conditioning demand.
Lower hydropower output typically pushes coal use higher in China. And major coal producers are also facing issues affecting their exports, McCloskey's Dendy said.
In Russia, the world's third-largest coal exporter, output is down as roughly two-thirds of producers are operating at a loss due to a stronger rouble and rising transportation costs, he said.
Dendy expects Australia's exports to rise this year, but analysts expect higher mining costs and restricted diesel supplies to choke output.
South Africa is drawing increased interest from Indian buyers seeking alternatives to uncertain Indonesian supplies, Pamnani said, but DBX expects "lumpy vessel clearances and shipment timing" to hurt exports in June.
Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan in Singapore and Sam Li and Colleen Howe in Beijing; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus
Source: Reuters