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BHP cuts 2024-25 met coal target with divestment

  • : Coking coal
  • 24/07/17

Australian resources firm BHP has set a lower coking coal production target for the 2024-2025 financial year that started on 1 July, after its divestment of the Blackwater and Daunia mines. But the miner has also set its sights on increasing output from its remaining assets.

The BHP Mitsubishi Alliance (BMA), which is 50pc owned by BHP and 50pc owned by Mitsubishi, has set lower production targets of 33mn-38mn t for 2024-25. The targets are reflective of the sale of its Blackwater and Daunia mines to Australian producer Whitehaven Coal that was completed on 2 April, and the impact of elevated strip ratios. The two mines together contributed 10mn t on a 100pc basis to the 2023-24 production before their divestment, the company said on 17 July.

BMA met its production guidance of 43mn-45mn t by producing 44.6mn t of coal in the 2023-24 financial year to 30 June. Production fell by 22pc from a year earlier, because of an extended longwall move and geotechnical issues at Broadmeadow in the first half of the fiscal year, the disruption at its 10mn t/yr Saraji mine in Queensland, as well as increased waste removal and stockpile rebuilding after the disruption caused by wet weather and labour shortages in 2023.

BHP received an average price of $271.26/t for hard coking coal and $206.84/t for weak coking coal in January-June, compared to an average of $276.22/t and $250.38/t in January-June 2023. It defines hard coking coal as those with a coke strength after reaction (CSR) of 35 and above and weak coking coal as those with a CSR of below 35.

BHP expects to be in the lower half of its cost guidance for the 2024 fiscal year. Expectations of lower production volumes led BHP to increase its cost guidance for the 2024 fiscal year to $119-125/t in April from $110-116/t in January and from $95-105/t in June 2023.

The firm is expecting production to increase to 43mn-45mn t/yr in the next five years, once stockpile rebuilding reaches a sustainable level and strip ratios normalise.

Argus last assessed the premium hard low-volatile metallurgical coal price at $236/t fob Australia on 16 July, down from $326.70/t on 2 January.

BHP metallurgical coal salesmn t
Coal typeApr-Jun '24Jan-Mar '24Apr-Jun '23FY 2023-24FY 2022-23%
Coking coal4.865.417.4519.5224.31-20
Weak coking coal0.040.931.062.253.1-27
Thermal coal-0.020.360.521.16-55
Total BMA4.96.368.8822.2928.57-22
Total BMA (100%)9.8112.7217.7544.5957.14-22

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25/07/07

US' Peabody extends Australian coal mine lock-out again

US' Peabody extends Australian coal mine lock-out again

Sydney, 7 July (Argus) — US coal producer Peabody Energy has extended a lock-out of workers at its Australian Metropolitan mine until late on 9 July, because of a continuing dispute with the Mining and Energy Union (MEU). MEU workers will remain barred from entering the mixed thermal, pulverised coal injection (PCI), and hard coking coal mine — which produced 1.8mn t of coal in 2024 — without pay until 9 July, the union and company confirmed on 7 July. Peabody's lock-out began on 28 June and was scheduled to end on 6 July . The company ended the action early on 3 July, but then reintroduced and extended it late on 4 July because of partial work bans. The MEU can launch an unlimited number of work stoppages and limited work bans at Metropolitan, based on a 7 June strike authorisation. The MEU and Peabody remain at odds over the use of contractors at the mine, among other issues. The two groups are scheduled to engage in a Fair Work Commission (FWC) mediation on 8 July. They have already had two FWC mediations over the dispute, said Peabody's vice-president of underground operations Mike Carter on 7 July. Peabody has also met with employees more than 10 times, he added. Metropolitan Coal remains fully committed to ongoing good faith negotiations with its workers, a Peabody spokesperson said on 7 July. MEU workers will rally outside the site early on 8 July, joined by other labour unions. The labour dispute at Metropolitan follows a series of strikes at Peabody Energy's 12mn t/yr Wilpinjong thermal coal mine in February, over a different contract negotiation. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU CBAM export plan only partial solution: Industry


25/07/03
25/07/03

EU CBAM export plan only partial solution: Industry

Brussels, 3 July (Argus) — Industry has continued to urge a more comprehensive export adjustment under the EU carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) following the European Commission's announcement of a forthcoming proposal yesterday, with some calling for full free emissions trading system (ETS) allocations for production destined for exports. Norwegian fertilizer firm Yara said the CBAM solution is "not good enough". The commission yesterday announced plans to reduce the risk of carbon leakage for goods exported from the EU in CBAM sectors under proposals to be presented by the end of the year, with the aim of providing equal treatment for all goods, whether produced, sold in the EU, or imported and exported. The commission's stated plans are "not good enough" for Monica Andres, Yara's executive vice-president for Europe. "We need a watertight and timely CBAM implementation to level the playing field with more carbon-intensive imports," Andres added, noting the commission's new proposal does not offer sufficient predictability and leads to an "incomplete" CBAM applying from 1 January 2026. "We would have preferred a solution which maintains full free allocations for the part of the production destined for exports," said BusinessEurope director general Markus Beyrer, adding CBAM is "untested and still incomplete" in its design. European steel association Eurofer said the commission's announcement on CBAM exports lacks the actual legal proposal and details on its design. CBAM sectors had proposed a simple mechanism based on free allocation for exports, Eurofer said, noting a "very limited" impact in reversing industrial decarbonisation given the proposed EU greenhouse gas reduction target of 90pc by 2040 against 1990 levels. Refinery industry association FuelsEurope has similarly called for any CBAM changes to maintain sufficient levels of free carbon allowance allocations and include measures to protect exports, if the measure's scope is extended to the refining sector. The scope of the mechanism so far includes cement, iron and steel, aluminium, fertilisers, electricity and hydrogen. The commission is consulting until 26 August on extending CBAM's scope to some downstream products and on circumvention risks. EU states and the European Parliament recently agreed to CBAM revisions exempting some 90pc of originally covered EU companies from reporting obligations. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU plans measures to support exports in CBAM sectors


25/07/02
25/07/02

EU plans measures to support exports in CBAM sectors

London, 2 July (Argus) — The European Commission said today that it intends to present plans by the end of the year to reduce the risk of carbon leakage for goods exported from the EU in sectors covered by the bloc's carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM). The proposal will be designed to provide equal treatment for all goods, "whether produced and sold in the EU, imported into the EU or exported", the commission said. The measure would be set up for a "defined period" and then reviewed in light of the planned 2026 revision of the EU emissions trading system (ETS). No further details were provided. Industries have long raised concerns about risks to competitiveness for products in CBAM sectors exported from the EU, given that they must still pay carbon costs while the mechanism only applies an effective carbon price on goods imported into the bloc. German industry federation BDI warned earlier this year that CBAM provides "no answer" to the problem of exports, while European cement and steel associations have called for export provisions under the mechanism. But there are concerns that introducing export protection measures could put CBAM at odds with World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules. Russia has already raised a CBAM dispute at the WTO , contending that the calculation of existing free ETS allocations for industry — which includes the value of exports — counts as an "alleged export subsidy" in contravention of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994, the Agreement on Import Licensing Procedures, and the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures. While deeming the measure an "important step", non-governmental organisation Bellona Europa today criticised the lack of information in the commission's initial proposal, which it said "was not presented with sufficient detail and does not provide a clear pathway for a long-term solution to the risk of carbon leakage from exports". "If rebates are the chosen path, they must be conditional on effective and serious decarbonisation commitments," Bellona said. The commission launched a separate consultation this week on whether to extend CBAM's scope to some downstream products to limit carbon leakage from the measure. It is seeking views on whether CBAM causes carbon leakage downstream, and whether extending its scope could reduce this risk or incentivise the take-up of low-carbon EU goods. It also asks respondents whether such an extension would increase costs for EU manufacturers or consumers, the extent of the administrative burden it would entail for EU importers, or non-EU producers and exporters, as well as the potential costs of related reporting requirements. The consultation also seeks views on whether CBAM in its current form poses circumvention risks, including via widely varying embedded emissions under the same goods categories, or resource shuffling, where companies choose to export their cleanest products to the EU without reducing their overall emissions. The consultation closes on 26 August. By Victoria Hatherick Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

India’s May coking coal imports rise 45pc on year


25/07/01
25/07/01

India’s May coking coal imports rise 45pc on year

Singapore, 1 July (Argus) — India's coking coal imports rose year on year in May driven by a jump in shipments from Russia and Indonesia. The country imported 7.32mn t of coking coal in May, up by 45pc from the previous year and by 13pc from April, according to data from e-commerce firm Mjunction. January-May shipments also rose by 12pc to 27.21mn t. Lower shipments from Australia and Canada were more than offset by increases from other suppliers. In particular, Russian shipments more than tripled to 1.90mn t from a year ago. Arrivals from Mozambique and Indonesia also rose by 53pc and 94pc respectively to 517,766t and 504,850t. India's metallurgical coke imports fell by 41pc to 296,848 t in May. Indonesian and Chinese coke arrivals more than halved from the previous year to 120,742t and 32,995t respectively, but were higher compared to April. Meanwhile, shipments from Poland and Columbia rose by 63pc and 29pc respectively to 106,900t and 36,211t from a year ago. Pulverised coal injection (PCI) imports fell 70pc on the year to 534,970t in May, with January-May volumes down 21pc. Both Australian and Russian volumes saw steep declines in the period at 54pc and 26pc respectively. India's crude steel output rose by nearly 10pc on the year to 13.5mn t in May. The Argus premium low-volatile hard coking coal index in May averaged $204.57/t cfr India, down by 22pc from the previous year. By Romil Sethi and Xiuqi Huang India metallurgical coal imports '000s Origin May-25 May-24 ± % Apr-25 ± % Jan-May 2025 Jan-May 2024 ± % Coking coal Australia 2,734 2,748 -1 3,063 -11 12,151 13,500 -10 US 1,290 943 +37 960 +34 4,515 4,191 +8 Canada 164 200 -18 313 -47 642 1,503 -57 Mozambique 518 339 +53 0 n/a 1,430 1,212 +18 Indonesia 505 260 +94 139 +264 1,271 1,118 +14 Russia 1,895 490 +287 1,420 +33 4,548 2,640 +72 Others 213 54 +291 559 -62 2,652 240 +1007 Total 7,319 5,035 +45 6,453 +13 27,210 24,404 +12 Met coke Indonesia 121 266 -55 85 +42 545 843 -35 China 33 101 -67 29 +14 193 413 -53 Poland 107 66 +63 0 n/a 238 316 -25 Colombia 36 28 +29 68 -47 200 87 +129 *Total 297 502 -41 403 -26 1,624 1,859 -13 PCI Australia 25 461 -95 173 -86 1,196 2,618 -54 Russia 477 1,303 -63 465 +3 3,890 5,287 -26 *Total 535 1,764 -70 637 -16 6,231 7,914 -21 Source: Mjunction *Note: Total includes additional small values excluded from individual breakdown, so component numbers may not sum to total Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

India extends coke import curbs till 31 Dec


25/07/01
25/07/01

India extends coke import curbs till 31 Dec

Mumbai, 1 July (Argus) — 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. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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