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Poland's JSW aims to boost met coal output despite fire

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 02/06/25

Polish coking coal and met coke producer JSW plans to increase its coking coal output in 2025 despite a fire last month at its semi-soft coal Budryk mine and subsequent force majeure on its contracts.

"We are undertaking effective measures to minimise the impact of the force majeure," JSW operations vice-president Adam Rozmus said today. The firm gave no further details on planned output in 2025, but earlier this year indicated that it was planning to increase its coking coal output to 11mn t this year from 9.9mn t/yr in 2024.

JSW said in May that the Budryk fire will reduce the company's planned output by 345,000t. The company added today that the mine wall affected by the fire has recently started production and that the output disruption will be spread over the remaining quarters of this year.

JSW said last week that some of the measures aimed at lifting coking coal output have been successful this year. It increased coking coal output to more than 2.3mn t in the first quarter, up by more than 6pc from its earlier plan.

JSW sold coking coal — including premium hard and semi-soft material — at $187/t in the first quarter, a 6pc discount to a fob Australia premium hard coking coal index, it said. The discount narrowed from 11pc in the fourth quarter last year as the share of premium hard coal in its output rose, the firm said. The company added that coking coal prices remain depressed, with some buyers reselling previously contracted volumes.

Conditions in the firm's met coke sector are even more challenging because of rising supplies of competitive Indonesian met coke to Europe. Current prices mean that the firm's coke production is consistently loss-making, JSW said. The company sold its coke — mainly met coke but including coke breeze and fuel coke — at $265/t on average in the first quarter, a 4pc discount to average met coke cif Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp prices.

JSW is drawing heavily on its so-called stabilisation fund, created when coking coal prices were high in 2022 and 2023. About 1.3bn zlotys ($350mn) remain in this fund, but the firm will struggle to maintain operations over the longer term unless coking coal and met coke prices rise, JSW indicated.


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