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Wednesday, 12 July 2017
Energy economics group says export market for Australian coal will decline
Office of the chief economist projects market will grow by 8.7% by
2022, but Institute for Energy Economics says this is based on out of
date analysis
Japan, South Korea and Taiwan together buy 70% of Australia’s export
coal, but some analysts say that market is about to contract.
Photograph: STRINGER/Reuters
As Australia mulls the building of its biggest-ever export thermal coal mine,
its biggest foreign buyers look set to reduce their consumption,
driving down the price of Australian coal, and the profitability of its
mines.
Japan, South Korea and Taiwan together buy about 30% of the world’s exported thermal coal, including 70% of Australia’s export coal.
Australia’s office of the chief economist has projected that market
will grow by 8.7% by 2022 – triple the global rate of growth in the
sector – but analysis by the pro-renewables Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (Ieefa) suggests the market will actually contract.
The Australian projections assume a growth in the global export coal
market of 2.5% by 2022, but Ieefa analyst Tim Buckley says that is
overly optimistic, given the world’s two largest buyers are clearly
contracting.
China, the world’s biggest buyer of foreign coal, is forecast to
continue to reduce imports after reaching its peak in 2013. And India
aims to virtually cease thermal coal imports.
But Buckley says the main problem for Australia’s biggest overseas
thermal coal markets is internal moves in Taiwan, South Korea and Japan,
which make Australia’s projections, released in March, out of date.
In what was described in local press
as an “unprecedented move”, the new Korean president elected in May,
Moon Jae-in, immediately ordered the temporary closure of eight ageing
coal power plants in South Korea for 30 days, and announced 10 plants
would be shut down for a third of each year starting from 2018.
Moon also reportedly said he would consider suspending the construction of coal power plants that are less than 10% completed.
In Japan,
decreased electricity consumption and growth in renewable energy was
dampening post-Fukushima plans of a boom in coal-generated electricity,
Buckely said, with two proposed plants already cancelled in the first
three months of 2017. That was likely to be the tip of the iceberg in
the next few years, he said.
In May, Taiwan updated its eight-year green energy development plan, which forecast a decline of one-third in its reliance on coal.
“The combined implications of Japan, South Korea and Taiwan as Australia’s three most import thermal coal export markets is profound,” Buckley said.
The result, Buckley said, is likely to be a reduction in demand for Australian coal from those countries of up to 2% each year.
“The election of president Moon Jae-in brings major changes to South
Korea’s energy sector, and comes at a time when Taiwan’s president Tsai
Ing-wen is also pressing for a radical electricity sector
transformation. Combined with the growing evidence of a sustained change
in Japan’s electricity market, this looks set to have a major impact on
the high energy seaborne thermal coal sector,” he said.
Fact v fiction: Adani's Carmichael coal mine – video explainer
“Seaborne thermal coal import demand peaked in 2014 and is facing
increasing headwinds. This is a structural decline reflecting the
combined pressures of increasing climate policy actions, ever more cost
effective renewable energy and growing air pollution concerns.”
“Combined with the risk of increased supply from [Adani’s] Carmichael
mine, this can only serve to leave the seaborne market oversupplied and
the inevitable outcome is lower equilibrium pricing, reduced profit
margins and more pressure to cut costs, meaning fewer jobs and
royalties,” Buckley said.
The news follows the release of industry-funded analysis
suggesting the construction of Adani’s huge Carmichael mine – which
would be Australia’s biggest-ever coal mine – would drive down the price
of export thermal coal, reducing production from elsewhere in
Queensland and in New South Wales.
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