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Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 18:37 EDT

China to Set Up National Coal Trading Centre in 2006

March 21, 2006
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Text of report in English by official Chinese news agency Xinhua (New China News Agency)

Beijing, 21 March: China plans to set up a national coal trading centre this year as part of its reform of the coal ordering system, which aims to solve the problem of oversupply.

Sources with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said China’s coal supply and demand would balance this year. But the pressure of oversupply is increasing due to rapidly rising coal output, Beijing News reported on Tuesday.

The NDRC forecast China’s total demand for coal will hit 2.25bn tons in 2006, with domestic demand standing at 2.17bn tons, and the remaining 80m tons exported.

China will consume 1.21bn tons of coal to generate electricity, it said.

Meanwhile, the nation’s coal output capacity is on the rapid rise. Coal production capacity has been expanded by at least 60m tons due to the operation of newly-built, renovated and expanded coal producers last year, the report said.

The difference between the market price and the state-fixed price for the coal supply to power plants, which can range from 30 yuan (3.75 US dollars) per ton to 80 yuan (10 dollars) or even 100 yuan (12.5 dollars) per ton, is another problem plaguing the sector.

The NDRC suggested a series of measures be implemented to straighten out the coal industry, including carrying out the state regulation for management and supervision of coal marketing, and controlling the approval of new licenses for coal dealers.