Jakarta:
For many coal miners in Indonesia’s
resource-dependent economy, a surprise shift in India’s coal industry — from
big importer to potential exporter — could not have come at a worse time.
Prices have slumped over the past five years and a slowing
China is buying less. Now, Indonesia faces an Indian double whammy: not only is
its main export market producing so much coal that it aims to wind down imports
in two years, it's also set to start exporting for the first time — to a market
dominated by Indonesia.
State-run Coal India (COAL.NS) is opening mines at the
rate of one a month and expanding existing ones, as Prime Minister Narendra
Modi fast-tracks environmental clearances to double output this decade and meet
election promises to provide power to a population of 1.3 billion.
That dash for production has left Coal India with a
stockpile of more than 50 million tonnes of mined coal, but domestic demand is
rising more slowly than anticipated, prompting it to start talks to export to
neighbouring Bangladesh.
Not so long ago, Indonesian coal executives brushed aside
concerns about slowing sales to China, citing strong Indian demand — suggesting
they have underestimated India's ability to quickly ramp up production.
“This is a threat to the Indonesian coal industry” said
Supriatna Suhala, executive director of the Indonesian Coal Mining Association
(ICMA). “In future, we may have to compete with India. They may become an
exporter to Asia.”
No comments:
Post a Comment