South African coal producers seeing Pakistan as destination for exports

LONDON: Sellers of South African coal are increasingly looking to the Pakistan import market as increasing demand there helps supplement the withdrawal of Indian buyers from imported coal.

Traditionally in Pakistan, the largest buyers of imported thermal coal had been cement plants as the country had few operating coal-fired power plants, however several new plants due to come online over the next few years was fueling sentiment for an already strong export destination.

Exports of thermal coal from South Africa to Pakistan were 3.37 million mt in 2014, 3.72 million mt in 2015, and 4.92 million mt in 2016, according to customs data collected by Platts. January-November 2017 exports almost doubled to 7.95 million mt, giving Pakistan an 11.02 per cent share of South African exports, having been 4.52 per cent in 2014.

“It has become a very competitive market, it is still growing so lots of people are interesting in building it,” a Central Europe-based trader of South African coal said Thursday.

The trader said his firm had more competition with other sellers of South African coal rather than Indonesian coal as Indonesian sellers were looking at the closer, larger market of China and Southeast Asia.

According to S&P Global Platts data, South African 5,500 kcal/kg NAR coal would be priced at $94.65/mt, basis Karachi as discharge port, while the broadly comparable Indonesian 5,900 kcal/kg GAR coal would be $95.25/mt, same basis.

This put the South African-Indonesian seaborne arbitrage at 60 cents/mt, with South African slightly cheaper, although market sources said South African coal would remain the preferred origin in the near-term, giving an additional margin to South African coal in theory.

Currently, there are three coal-fired power plants under construction in Pakistan. The Thar Block II power station, nameplate capacity 660 MW, is expected to come online in 2019 although a source at Sindh Engro Coal Mining Company told Platts the plant will burn lignite from the developing Thar coal field rather than imported coal.

The Port Qasim EPC power station, and the Hubco power station, both with a nameplate capacity 1,320 MW, are scheduled to come online between the end of the year and the start of 2019, and are designed to burned coal of a higher calorific value than is produced domestically.

An additional 3.7 GW of coal-fired capacity has been announced with imported coal as the primary fuel source.

“There is a lot of coal-fired generation coming online in Pakistan and we have been selling more coal there over the last year,” a South Africa-based producer said Thursday.

“Some new plants there are burning lignite but others are made of bituminous coal, so they don’t really compete with each other,” the source added.

A second South African producer said his company was seeing increasing demand from Pakistan recently for high-CV and low-CV coals due to the investment in power stations and cement plants.

The source said his company had been selling coals with calorific values ranging from 4,800-6,000 kcal/kg NAR to Pakistan recently, however, the 6,000 kcal/kg NAR grade was less prevalent than lower grades.

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