COLUMN-China coal restrictions may have little impact on imports – by Clyde Russell (Reuters U.S. – September 17, 2014)

http://www.reuters.com/

LAUNCESTON, Australia, Sept 17 (Reuters) – Who to believe? The traders and analysts who say China’s new regulations on coal quality is a body blow to Australian exports, or the companies and their association who say the impact will be insignificant.

In this case, it seems far more likely that the impact will be minimal, but not non-existent, as the new rules will lead to changes in the composition of coal China imports. A far bigger impact may come from the curbs on transporting low-quality domestic coal, which may actually boost imports.

In theory, the Chinese ban from the start of 2015 on coal imports above certain ash and sulphur contents appears to favour Indonesia, the world’s biggest shipper of thermal coal, over Australia, the world’s top exporter of metallurgical coal and number two for thermal coal.

China’s new rules aren’t uniform across the country, but for exporters, the most relevant is the ban on using coal with ash content higher than 16 percent and sulphur of 1 percent for cities in the southern Pearl River Delta, the eastern Yangtze River Delta and three northern cities including Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei.

The southeastern cities are biggest users of imported coal, given their distance from the bulk of China’s own coal output. The fear for Australian exporters is that 80 percent of the 54 million tonnes of thermal coal it exported to China in 2013 exceeded the new ash limit, according to consultants Wood Mackenzie.

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As mining curbs bite, India offers market to glut-hit iron ore – by Manolo Serapio Jr. (Reuters India – September 16, 2014)

http://in.reuters.com/

SINGAPORE – (Reuters) – An oversupplied global iron ore market may find some relief from an unlikely source as former No.3 exporter India turns into a big importer due to a cutback in domestic production.

The country may ship in up to 45 million tonnes over the next three years as home-grown iron ore output falls short of domestic steel production needs, an executive at an influential industry group said.

India imported just 0.37 million tonnes of the steelmaking raw material in 2013/14, government data showed. But already JSW Steel, India’s third-largest maker of the alloy, has said it will import 6 million tonnes of iron ore in 2014/15 against zero a year earlier.

“There’s no option but to import to meet the shortfall. We’re looking at between 10 and 15 million tonnes every fiscal year over the next three years,” Basant Poddar, vice president of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, the only industry group for mining firms in the country, told Reuters by phone.

“The mine closures all over India, starting from Karnataka, Goa, Odisha and Jharkhand, have created a massive disruption to supply,” Poddar said.

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China ban on low-grade coal set to hit global miners – by Lucy Hornby, Jamie Smyth and Neil Hume (Financial Times – September 16, 2014)

http://www.ft.com/intl/markets/commodities

Beijing, Sydney and London – China’s top planning agency has banned the use of low-quality coal in a further effort to address the country’s problem with pollution and its growing glut of the fuel. The move comes as a blow to international miners already smarting from a steep drop in iron ore prices.

Huge new coal projects in the west of China combined with slower than expected growth in the east have already hit China’s coal imports, which for the first eight months of the year are 5 per cent lower than the same period last year. Prices have tumbled.

Australian thermal coal prices, the benchmark for Asia, have dropped more than 20 per cent this year, and could decline further as the door to China closes.

The National Development and Reform Commission said on Monday it would ban the burning of coal with ash content of more than 16 per cent or sulphur content of more than 1 per cent from 2015 in populous and prosperous eastern cities that are the focus of national efforts to fight air pollution.

That would, in effect, bar the import of lower-quality coal from Australia, Southern Africa and elsewhere, since the cities along the east coast are also the biggest consumers of imported seaborne coal.

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Rinehart rejects talk of Korean raid on Roy Hill – by Andrew Burrell (The Australian – September 16, 2014)

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business

GINA Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting has rejected speculation that Korea Development Bank is planning to buy a 5 per cent stake in the magnate’s flagship $10 billion Roy Hill iron ore project in the Pilbara.

A report published yesterday by a Seoul-based industry journal said the state-owned bank was planning to purchase the stake in partnership with Korean pension fund firms and insurance companies for 170 billion won (about $180 million).

The market value of Roy Hill is likely to have slumped in recent months given the weaker outlook for iron ore prices, which have plunged to $US82 a tonne, although the low-cost Roy Hill project would still be profitable at current prices. The report in the Korea IT Times appeared to suggest that Korea Development Bank would buy the stake from Hancock Prospecting.

“There is absolutely no truth to the report,” said a spokesman for Hancock Prospecting, Mrs Rinehart’s private company. Hancock Prospecting owns 70 per cent of Roy Hill, while Japan’s Marubeni has 15 per cent, South Korea’s Posco holds 12.5 per cent and Taiwan’s China Steel Corp has 2.5 per cent.

Sources said Posco would be an unlikely seller of its stake after chief executive Oh Joon-Kwon last month praised Roy Hill as a key asset for the Korean company.

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COLUMN-The real problem for commodity nations is currency, not prices – by Clyde Russell (Reuters India – September 15, 2014)

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LAUNCESTON, Australia, Sept 15 (Reuters) – The pressing problem for some resource-rich countries isn’t that prices for commodities have dropped sharply, it’s that their currencies haven’t dropped in tandem.

The plight of Australia and Indonesia, the major commodity exporters in the Asia-Pacific region, is driven home by the fact that their currencies have actually gained against the U.S. dollar this year, even as commodity prices have plunged.

This is a body blow to earnings in those countries and defies both economic logic and precedent, which should have seen the Australian dollar and Indonesian rupiah start to drop as revenue from resource exports declined.

While the Australian dollar did slip almost 4 U.S. cents last week to trade around 90 cents early on Monday, it is still stronger than it was at the end of last year, when it fetched 89.03 cents. In contrast, Australia’s two major export earners, iron ore and coal, have dropped dramatically. Spot Asian iron ore .IO62-CNI=SI has fallen 39 percent so far this year, hitting $82 a tonne on Sept. 12, a five-year low.

Thermal coal at Australia’s Newcastle Port, an Asian benchmark, dropped to $66.07 a tonne in the week ended Sept. 5, a five-year low and down 23 percent from the start of the year. What is clear is that commodity currencies have failed to respond this year to weaker commodity prices in the way they did in the 2008 global recession.

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Miners face threat of coal ban – by Sarah-Jane Tasker (The Australian – September 15, 2014)

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business

AUSTRALIA’S thermal coal miners, already struggling to turn a profit, could be further hit with an import ban on lower quality coal by China.

The price of thermal coal has come under renewed pressure amid fears that the economic powerhouse would implement quality-based restrictions on coal imports, which could impact ­almost half of Australia’s exports to the Asian giant.

Macquarie analyst Stefan ­Ljubisavljevic has outlined that while he remained sceptical that the proposed ban on high-ash, high-sulphur material would be enacted, on a “worst-case-scenario” basis it was Australia’s miners that would suffer.

The ban, proposed by the China National Coal Association and being scrutinised by the ­National Development and Reform Commission, would prohibit all coal imports above 15 per cent ash and 0.6 per cent sulphur.

“Based on Wood Mackenzie data, almost half of all Australian exportable thermal coal would not meet a 15 per cent ash and 0.6 per cent sulphur cut-off. As a result, implementation of this draft ban would, in our opinion, put at risk about 40 million tonnes per annum of Australian coal volume,” Mr Ljubi­savljevic said.

The Macquarie analyst said that if the ban was enacted, the best-case scenario for the thermal coal market would be that exports from Russia and Indonesia would simply be redirected to China from other destinations.

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China’s coal proposals leave some hope for exporters – by Clyde Russell (Reuters U.S. – September 11, 2014)

http://www.reuters.com/

LAUNCESTON, Australia – (Reuters) – When the best thing you can say about new policies is that they aren’t as bad as they could have been, then you know your industry is in deep trouble.

China’s proposed cap on coal consumption and ban on low-quality imports won’t have sparked celebrations among export-focused coal miners, but may have given them some hope that the world’s top importer of the fuel will remain open for business.

The State Council, China’s cabinet, on Tuesday published a draft version of a law to tighten air pollution control by cutting the use of coal, which is used to generate about 80 percent of the nation’s electricity.

The draft didn’t spell out exactly what the consumption cap would be, nor the quality standards that would be imposed on imported fuel.

However, industry sources say the recommendation from the National Energy Administration is that coal with a sulfur content of more than 0.6 percent and ash content of more than 15 percent be banned.

What is also interesting to note is that the proposed import ban doesn’t specify heating value, meaning low-calorific coal could still be shipped in as long as it has low ash and sulfur.

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China’s Global Mining Play Is Failing to Pan Out – by Wayne Arnold (Wall Street Journal – September 10, 2014)

http://online.wsj.com/home-page

Citic’s Troubled Australian Iron-Ore Mine Shows How Much Has Gone Wrong with China’s Push to Buy Raw Materials

CAPE PRESTON, Australia—A $10 billion iron-ore mine that has taken more than eight years to develop near this remote Australian port is a glaring example of how much has gone wrong with China’s decadelong push to buy up raw materials around the world.

Citic Pacific’s Sino Iron mine cost roughly four times its initial budget, and analysts who track the project say it likely will lose hundreds of millions of dollars in 2014, its first full year of production. Citic Pacific, a Hong Kong-listed subsidiary of Chinese state-owned behemoth Citic Group, and its contractors made a series of blunders, from thinking they could import workers at Chinese pay levels to a botched bet on currencies that forced the company to seek a $1.5 billion bailout from its parent.

And while Sino Iron is at last shipping ore, it remains locked in a legal battle with its local partner, Clive Palmer, a property mogul turned politician who has accused Citic Pacific of taking Australian resources without fully paying for them.

“It was a painful learning process,” said Zhang Jijing, who spent 16 years running Citic Group’s Australian business before being appointed in late 2009 president and executive director of subsidiary Citic Pacific, which recently changed its name to Citic Ltd. “Today I look back and I did not realize it would be so difficult.”

Over the past decade, China rushed to buy up global commodities as its economy boomed—both to feed its factories and to ensure it wasn’t reliant on Western powers for raw materials.

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Philippine lawmaker sees five-year grace period before ore export ban – by Enrico Dela Cruz (Reuters U.S. – September 9, 2014)

http://www.reuters.com/

MANILA – (Reuters) – A proposed Indonesia-style ban on exports of unprocessed metal ores from the Philippines may not be implemented for about seven years, the proponent of a bill before Congress said on Tuesday, potentially easing pressure on nickel prices.

Congressman Erlpe John Amante said a law aimed at forcing miners to process raw minerals before export could take two years to be enacted, while miners deserved a five-year grace period before mandatory domestic processing took effect.

News last week of the proposed legislation has unsettled the nickel market, which was caught off guard when Indonesia banned nickel ore exports in January. Nickel jumped 7 percent in four sessions to Monday’s close and is up 41 percent this year.

The Philippines currently supplies China with virtually all of the nickel ore that it uses to make nickel pig iron, a raw material used by steelmakers, following the Indonesian ban.

Amante said the Philippines could triple its revenue from mineral exports if his bill, which was filed in July and has been approved at the committee stage in the lower chamber of Congress, becomes law. A matching bill was filed in the upper house Senate in late August.

“We’ve started the ball rolling so I’m very hopeful with the timeline,” he said in an interview with Reuters in his office in Congress, adding that he hoped the bill would become law within two years.

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COLUMN-Proposed Philippines minerals ban spooks nickel – by Andy Home (Reuters India – September 10, 2014)

http://in.reuters.com/

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

(Reuters) – News that the Philippines was preparing to follow Indonesia in banning exports of unprocessed minerals caused panic in the London nickel market last week.

The Philippines has emerged as the main supplier of nickel ore to China’s massive nickel pig iron (NPI) sector after the cessation of exports from Indonesia. The threat that this flow too would be cut off appeared to represent a dramatic acceleration of an already bullish story.

Until it emerged on Tuesday that any Philippines ban is several years away. On the London Metal Exchange (LME) benchmark three-month nickel collapsed by $1,000 per tonne to $18,925 on Tuesday, wiping out the gains notched up over the previous days.

However, the market might be overly complacent about the apparently extended time-line before any Philippines ore ban, if it’s collectively assuming that events in that country will mirror those in Indonesia.

What is less in doubt is what the recent price roller coaster says about the bullish mindset in this market, particularly its responsiveness to supply-side news.

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Nickel price rally still has a long way to go – by Frik Els (Mining.com – September 9, 2014)

http://www.mining.com/

Indonesia, supplying more than a fifth of global exports, surprised the mining world in January by putting into effect an outright ban on nickel ore exports.

Initially record warehouse inventories, massive stockpiling by Chinese pig iron producers and growing mine supply kept a lid on the price which was languishing at near five-year lows below $14,000 a tonne at the start of the year.

But the Asian nation, against expectations, stuck to its guns and the ban, in combination with fears that tensions with Russia could affect supply from top miner Norilsk, sent the price of the steelmaking ingredient above $20,000 in May.

The price subsequently pulled back from those levels, but last week saw nickel take another stab at $20,000 a tonne after the Philippines – the only other source in the region of high-grade laterite ore required by China and responsible for 9% of global mine supply – hinted that it may follow Indonesia’s playbook.

Even before suggestions of an ore export ban Philippine supply has been sketchy

Nickel was last trading at $18,750 and is up 35% in 2014, but expectations are for the price to appreciate sharply this year and next. Capital Economics, a research house, says Chinese pig iron makers are likely to have run down their stocks by the first half of next year.

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Odisha [India] to ensure long-term [chrome, iron] ore supply to industries (Times of India – September 9, 2014)

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BHUBANESWAR: The Odisha government on Monday decided to put in place a long-term raw material linkage policy to supply iron ore and chrome ore to industries that have signed MoUs with it.

The decision, taken at a meeting of the state cabinet headed by chief minister Naveen Patnaik, aims at encouraging establishment of mineral-based industries in the state, official sources said.

It follows repeated demands from different industrial houses for assured raw material supply. “The Odisha Mining Corporation will enter into five-year contracts with industries having MoUs with the state government,” chief secretary Gokul Chandra Pati said, briefing mediapersons.

The state-owned corporation will provide half of its production or iron ore to such industries while it would sell the rest in the open market. “The industries will get assured supply, but will have to pay the market price,” the chief secretary noted.

Official sources said the OMC will have a sales agreement with such industries akin to central PSUs National Mineral Development Corporation and Mahanadi Coalfields Limited. “We will consider supplying bauxite and manganese through similar arrangements in future,” a senior officer said.

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Philippine committee approves bill banning mineral ore exports – by Erik dela Cruz and Rosemarie Francisco (Reuters India – September 8, 2014)

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(Reuters) – A Philippine bill seeking a halt to exports of unprocessed mineral ores has been approved at the committee stage in the lower chamber of Congress, one of two bills aimed at extracting more value from the country’s mineral resources.

The measure will go next to a full session of the lower house of Congress for discussion and voting, but no schedule has yet been set, said Ronald Madrigal, staff to Congressman Erlpe John Amante who introduced the bill in July.

A counterpart bill has also been introduced in the upper house Senate by Senator Paolo Benigno Aquino, a first cousin of President Benigno Aquino. (To read the bill in full, click bit.ly/1pGeIoV)

The bills, which would require domestic processing of all minerals extracted in the country prior to export, have raised concern at the possibility of a halt to exports of nickel ore from the Philippines, in line with similar action by Indonesia.

London Metal Exchange nickel rose 1.7 percent in early European trade on Monday and have risen more than 7 percent since news of the potential Philippines ban was revealed last week.

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Japan loosens China’s grip on rare earths supplies – by Sonali Paul and Yuka Obayashi (Reuters U.S. – September 4, 2014)

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MELBOURNE/TOKYO – (Reuters) – Japan is pushing to secure at least 60 percent of its rare earth needs from outside China within four years, as it bolsters efforts to curb its dependence on the world’s biggest producer of elements crucial in smart phones, computers and cars.

Japan aims to sign a deal as early as this month that would give it four types of light rare earths from India, and has helped fund an Australian rare earths mine and Malaysian processing plant built by Australia’s Lynas Corp.

Its search for supply security has also led to a joint venture in Kazakhstan, recycling rare earths from batteries and motor magnets, and even exploring for rare earths in the Pacific Ocean seabed. China currently produces about 90 percent of the world’s rare earths.

Japan, which sources virtually all its rare earths from China, either directly or indirectly, has been trying to find new sources of supply since its neighbor held back shipments in 2010 during a row over disputed islands and then curbed global exports to preserve its own resources.

“It is critically important for Japan to secure sources of rare earths outside of China,” said Akira Terakawa, deputy director at mineral and natural resources division of Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.

The Indian deal would provide 15 percent of Japan’s needs. If Lynas is able to ramp up production as agreed, Japan could be sourcing more than 60 percent of its expected rare earths demand from outside China by 2018, based on Reuters calculations from Japanese demand data and growth figures provided by a trading house which deals with rare earths.

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Tsingshan eyes first Indonesian nickel pig iron output in Jan – by Fergus Jensen and Melanie Burton (Reuters U.S. – September 4, 2014)

 http://www.reuters.com/

JAKARTA/SYDNEY – (Reuters) – China’s Tsingshan Group expects to start production at its Indonesian nickel pig iron smelter as soon as January, becoming the second plant to ramp up since the country’s new mineral processing laws came into force at the start of the year.

“Hopefully by October or November we will have started commissioning,” said Slamet Panggabean, finance manger of Tsingshan’s local joint venture partner Bintang Delapan Mineral, referring to the firm’s pilot smelter project in Morowali on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.

“The plan is for production (to begin) in January or February.” As part of a strategy to reap more value from its mineral wealth, Indonesia banned ore exports in January as it pushed its nickel and copper miners to set up metal processing plants. The move has driven up London Metal Exchange nickel prices by a third so far this year.

Stocks of nickel pig iron at China’s stainless steel makers are running down, leaving them exposed to a supply gap next year and fuelling the need to build smelters in Indonesia as quickly as possible.

Tsingshan, China’s second largest stainless steel company, was one of the few firms to act when the law was enacted in 2009 and is well ahead of other nickel pig iron producers, many of which held back on hopes the ban would be rolled back.

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