China's coal import is predicted to further increase this year
based on last year's import of 10.81 million tons despite the fact
China is the world's top producer and second largest exporter of
coal.
Customs information shows that the major importers are economically
developed provinces along China's eastern coastal region like
Guangdong and Zhejiang. The coal mainly came from Australia,
Vietnam, South Africa and Russia for the purpose of electricity
generation.
The rapid economic growth of these provinces has boosted the demand
for electricity, and thus an increased demand for coal. However,
more cost in domestic transportation made the two provinces import
coal rather than buy coal from other Chinese areas.
Importing cost less since a freight train from the country's
coal-yielding north to the needy coastal markets can carry merely
several thousand tons. However, an international cargo ship is
capable of bearing 20,000 to 100,000 tons.
Meanwhile, the relatively low price in the sluggish world coal
market also stimulated imports. Imports via Guangdong, for
instance, cost 29.55 US dollars per ton on the average in 2002,
down by 23.6 percent from 38.66 US dollars the previous year.
Experts warn that with the relaxing limit of market entry, domestic
coal producers will face increasing competition from the outside
even though last year's 83.84 million tons of export was much more
than the coal imports.
(Xinhua News Agency February 14, 2003)
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