India has extended quantitative restrictions (QR) on Low Ash Metallurgical Coke (LAM Coke) imports for another six months, from 1 July to 31 December 2025.
The Directorate general of foreign trade (DGFT) issued the notification on 30 June, keeping country-wise quotas unchanged.
The total volume stands at 1.42mn t, mirroring the previous six months. Australia, Russia, and Indonesia retain the bulk of the total allocation.
Imported coking coal prices have been on a steady downward trajectory since the start of the year. Despite a spate of mining incidents from Australia minor in April, the support in spot prices was deemed momentary with China staying out of the spot market, while seasonal monsoon lulls in India weighed heavily on coking coal procurement.
The metallurgical coal premium hard low-volatile cfr east coast India price started at $212.85/t cfr India on 2 January this year, and fell as low as $181/t year-to-date on 21 March and was assessed at $189.45/t cfr on 30 June, marking a $23.4/t cfr drop from the start of the year.
The country has also ramped up on protectionist measures in the second quarter of this year, following mounting concerns of a potential dumping of Chinese steel products into India amid an already-saturated global steel complex.
In late April, India imposed a 12pc safeguard duty on steel imports in a bid to protect its domestic steel industry. The safeguard duty would be in place for 200 days, in addition to the QR restrictions that has went into effect since 1 January this year.

