China Plans to Cap Key Coal Price to Ease an Energy Crisis

China Agrees Plan to Cap Key Coal Price to Ease Energy Crisis

China plans to limit the price miners sell thermal coal for as it seeks to ease a power crunch that’s prompted electricity rationing and even caused a blackout in a major city last month. 

The National Development and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning body, aims to set the price of its most-popular 5,500-NAR grade coal at 440 yuan ($69) a ton at the pit-head, according to people familiar with the situation, who asked not to be identified as they aren’t authorized to speak publicly. That price, which includes taxes, is a target rate, and there will be an absolute ceiling at 528 yuan, the people said.

The plan, which is scheduled to last until May 1 of next year, is pending approval by the State Council, China’s cabinet, and could be revised, according to the people. NDRC also wants downstream sales prices to be controlled, though it will let local governments set standards to limit the price of local coal trading, the people said. Coal importers will obtain subsidies to balance their losses, they said.

Read more: China Tears Up Rule Book in Race to Fix Its Energy Crisis

The 440 yuan price target will likely apply to term supplies from coal mines to key users like power plants in order to ease generators’ cash flow tightness and help boost electricity output, said Jia Zheng, a trader with Shanghai Dongwu Jiuying Investment Management Co. The guidelines for supplies to other users, which are decided by local governments, might be set at higher levels, she said.

“The bilateral pricing policies could ensure the coal supplies and prices for power plants and still provide incentives to coal mining production at the same time,” Jia said. The price cap means that coal will be delivered to power plants at an acceptable level of 800 yuan a ton, she said. 

The NDRC, the cabinet ministry that’s in charge of energy prices, said in a statement late Wednesday that it held a meeting with the coal industry to study concrete measures to intervene in the coal market. The planning body didn’t respond to a phone call and a fax inquiry from Bloomberg News earlier.

Government Intervention

The energy crisis that’s engulfed the world’s second-largest economy started in part due to skyrocketing coal prices, which caused almost all coal-fired power plants in the country to run at losses. Zhengzhou’s benchmark coal futures rose to a record above 1,980 yuan a ton earlier this month, while spot prices soared even higher.

The surges in the both futures and physical coal markets triggered immediate intervention by the country’s central government. Action by authorities to curb those gains, and to help miners boost supply, have had an impact, with futures tumbling by about a third in the past week.

Some companies have already started curbing prices after top Chinese government leaders urged the industry to improve the pricing mechanism for coal and power. Jinneng Holding Coal Group Co., a Shanxi-based producer, said earlier Wednesday that it would cap the price of 5,500-NAR grade coal at 1,200 yuan per ton. That followed price cuts of about 100-360 yuan per ton by other miners in major coal production hubs last week.

The 440 yuan level was based on a 300 yuan estimate of the physical costs of mining the coal and transporting it to the surface, while labor and other costs account for more than 100 yuan, according to one of the people. That would cover the cost of operations in most mines in the country.

Coal is a tightly state-controlled industry in China. Setting a cap on prices is unlikely to harm output as Beijing has ordered miners to maximize supplies, which they will do no matter the cost. China Shenhua Energy Co. and Yanzhou Coal Mining Co. tumbled in trading in Hong Kong on Wednesday. Prices of aluminum, which are often recently being traded as a proxy of China’s current power crisis, fell sharply in London.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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