Indonesia's ban on coal exports likely to have 'serious repercussions' on already challenging market: observers
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TROUBLE is brewing in the coal market.
With Indonesia, the world's largest exporter of the commodity and China's largest overseas supplier, having announced a January ban on exports over concerns of low supplies in domestic power plants, coal prices have already shot up.
The price of Indonesian 4,200 kcal/kg GAR (gross as received) coal rose 0.7 per cent after the announcement to hit US$54.56 per tonne on Jan 3, but pared some gains to US$54.32 at the close of Wednesday (Jan 5). And Australia's Newcastle coal prices, a benchmark for the Asian market, have been up 2.6 per cent since the Jan 1 announcement.
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