Coal piles up as domestic firms prefer imports
According to statistics from the General Customs Department, by December 15 Vietnam had imported a total 13 million tonnes of coal worth US$860 million, more than four times the targeted 3 million tonnes.
But coal production in many countries remains unchanged.
In the event, the prices have dropped by than 10 per cent.
In August alone the price in Australia’s Newcastle Port dropped from 84 USD per tonne to 74 USD.
In Vietnam, the price of coal 11A sold by TKV was 69 USD per tonne while China sold the same variety for 45-56 USD exploited from open-cash mine.
Worse still, costs for domestically exploiting coal have also been increasing by 3 or 4 per cent per year due to difficult exploitation conditions.
Analysts said domestic prices are high because taxes and charges on coal products have been rising relentlessly in recent years.
A 12 percent natural resource tax is slapped on coal mining, and the rate goes up to 14 per cent in case of open-cast mines.
The comparable taxes are 7 per cent and 6 per cent in Australia and 3 percent and 7 percent in Indonesia. In China, they range from from zero to 4 percent.
Not surprisingly, many electricity companies have switched from domestic to imported coal.
Since the beginning of this year, many of Electricity of Vietnam (EVN)’s subsidiaries have sought permission to import coal.
EVN itself plans to import around 10 milion tonnes for its three thermal power plants, namely the 600MW expanded Duyen Hai Project No.3, the 1,200MW Vinh Tan Project No.4, and the 3,000MW Duyen Hai Project.
PetroVietnam is seeking coal for five thermal electricity plants with a combined capacity of 6000MW. The company intends to use imported coal for Long Phu 1, Quang Trach 1 and Song Hau 1 plants.
In February, PVN signed an agreement in principle with an Australian company to import around 3 million tonnes a year.
The downside is that, with Vietnam itself being a large producer of coal, the rising imports mean the domestic coal industry is saddled with increasingly large inventories.
According to the Ministry of Industry, at the end of April the inventory was 11 million tonnes as only three million tonnes were exported.
Experts said the quality of coal is affected severely if left unused for a long time after being mined, making exports even harder.-