WRITE for ATol ADVERTISE MEDIA KIT GET ATol BY EMAIL ABOUT ATol CONTACT US
Asia Time Online - Daily News
             
Asia Times Chinese
AT Chinese



    China Business
     Nov 29, 2005
Good prospects, stable prices seen for coal

BEIJING - China's coal industry will develop vigorously over the next five years and see bright prospects for the long term, Wang Xianzheng, deputy director of the State Work Safety Administration, said in a Beijing forum recently.

Coal is China's main source of energy, producing some 70% of the country's primary energy supply. The eleventh five-year plan, the blueprint for China's development from 2006-2010, established a fundamental energy strategy that is based on coal as well as the development of multiple alternatives, Wang said at the Sixth National Congress of Coal Science and Technology.

In recent years, China has established 177 high-yield and high-efficiency mines. In 2004, the mechanization level of the formerly



state-owned major mines reached 82.7%. The death rate per million tons of coal produced fell to 3.081 in 2004, from 5.77 in 2000. The number at major state-owned mines stood at less than 1.00. Coal production rose to 1.956 billion tons, from 999 million tons in 2000. However, China's coal industry is still far behind its counterparts in developed countries, Wang said, and illustrated a series of problems such as the incomplete shift from an extensive economic mode to an intensive economic mode and the lack of technological innovation.

Powered by coal-fired electricity, China's rocketing economy has driven the coal industry into a new era. In 2005, the total installed power generation capacity will reach 510 million kilowatts, up 15.7% from a year earlier, which will require the coal supply to rise accordingly by 120-180 million tons of coal per year.

Driven by growing electricity demand and rocketing oil prices, domestic consumption of coal and liquid fuels produced from coal will see an upswing, Wang said. Meanwhile, the country will cut overall coal production by 120 million tons, since 4,000 small-sized mines out of 10,000 might be closed by year-end, Wang said. However, the closures would create a bigger market for mines with safe production conditions, he stressed.

Under China's current energy consumption standards, China will consume over 2.2 billion tons of coal by 2010. Currently established and operating mines can only provide 1.67 billion tons. By 2010, coal produced in mines with safe working conditions is projected to reach 1.85 billion tons, up from 1.2 billion tons in 2004.

Coal prices to remain stable next year
Despite a slide over the last few months, coal prices in China have been on the rise again since entering into the fourth quarter. An official of the Coal Sales Office (CSO) of Shanxi province, the biggest coal-producing province in China, predicted that coal prices will remain stable in the coming year thanks to the robust growth of the Chinese economy.

The recent slide in prices mostly affected coal for coke production, which was due to falling demand from the steel industry, while other major coal products maintained stable price levels, according to a meeting held recently by CSO. However, coal prices should remain on an upward course in the long run, said Xu Lianzhong, an official of the National Development and Reform Commission, suggesting that coal prices may rise in the event of oil or power price hikes and the removal of caps on investments in high-energy consuming sectors, whose expansion is closely related to coal prices.

ADB helps seal carbon credit sales
A coal mine/coal bed methane utilization project in northeast China entered into agreements recently with two separate buyers under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), according to the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The transactions were structured by ADB's Clean Development Mechanism Facility and Clearworld Energy, a clean energy development company headquartered in Beijing.

The seller in the transaction is Fuxin Mining Group and the buyers are ICTJ Limited and a consortium led by Natsource. The transaction includes innovative pricing structures that will provide economic benefits to the seller. The project will improve coal mine methane and coal bed methane extraction, distribution, and utilization at mines around Fuxin, Liaoning province, said the bank.

The extraction operations will both boost safety in the mines and supply methane, a clean fuel, to residents, industry, and electricity generation schemes. The process reduces greenhouse gas emissions by capturing and using methane that would otherwise be released into the atmosphere during the mining process.

The project attracted strong competition from buyers. This was helped by the fact that underlying project finance had been secured, with ADB approving a loan for US$15.8 million in November 2004. The bank said there was strong host country support for the project from both the central government and the Liaoning provincial government, and that it complied with ADB's social and environmental guidelines.

The CDM is a market-based financial instrument set up under the Kyoto Protocol that allows industrialized countries to invest in developing country projects and acquire greenhouse gas emission reduction credits, or carbon credits, that they can then use to meet their greenhouse gas reduction targets under the protocol. The Kyoto Protocol sets binding targets for industrialized countries for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions that would lower the risk of global climate change. As a greenhouse gas, methane is 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide.

ADB's CDM facility was set up in September 2003 to provide technical and administrative assistance to eligible projects in parallel with project identification and loan processing. ADB undertook a call for expressions of interest from entities interested in buying carbon credits from the project in March 2005. The larger volume of credits from the project were purchased by ICTJ Limited in association with a major oil and gas trading house. ICTJ Limited is a company established by the shareholders of ICECAP Limited to carry out trading activities in carbon emissions.

Dave Allen, a director of ICTJ, said the company is very pleased to have played its part in closing this ground-breaking transaction with Fuxin Mining Group, and that they believe the deal will become a template for future sales of carbon emission reductions out of China. The Transaction Services division of Natsource, the other entity engaged in the transaction, led a syndicate that included KfW, a large German development bank. This syndicate will receive an initial allocation of credits. Natsource President Jack Coge said the deal shows the potential for improving the safety conditions in the mining sector, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and producing clean affordable energy.

(Asia Pulse/XIC)


Coal chemical production equipment sought (Nov 4, '05)

Peabody Energy hunts China coal investments (Sep 23, '05)

China looks to coal to oil the wheels of industry (May 27, '05)

The human price of coal (Jan 15, '04)

China's deadly mining industry (Jul 26, '03)

 
 



All material on this website is copyright and may not be republished in any form without written permission.
© Copyright 1999 - 2005 Asia Times Online Ltd.
Head Office: Rm 202, Hau Fook Mansion, No. 8 Hau Fook St., Kowloon, Hong Kong
Thailand Bureau: 11/13 Petchkasem Road, Hua Hin, Prachuab Kirikhan, Thailand 77110