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Indonesia's ban on coal exports likely to have 'serious repercussions' on already challenging market: observers

Uma Devi
Published Wed, Jan 5, 2022 · 11:22 AM

    DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.

    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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