Coal comfort quarter
HUGE increases in Chinese imports of Australia’s raw minerals in the last month have buoyed hopes that bulk shipping between the two nations could bounce back sooner than expected.
However, while Chinese Government data suggests a huge upturn in imports of Australian iron ore, copper, zinc and aluminium in the last month, the move is also suspected as stockpiling while prices are low and ship chartering is cheap.
China’s coal imports in the first quarter of 2009 revealed what has been seen as early signs of a fundamental shift in coal procurement. As well as importing record amounts of iron ore, China has also imported record volumes of metallurgical coal, which hit 1.9m tonnes in March.
There are also signs of substantial tonnage of thermal coal, a Dahlman Rose research note said.
In April, 30 panamax bulk carriers were booked to transport coal from Australia to China, implying 2.1m tonnes of imports, along with another eight panamaxes booked so far in May. Four ships were booked to load coal from Indonesia, the world’s largest thermal coal exporter.
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