The 8.7 magnitude earthquake that struck off the coast of the Indonesian island of Sumatra rattled local coal markets while bringing the country’s importance as a thermal coal supplier to the fore.
The quake, which did not trigger a tsunami like the one experienced
during the 2004 catastrophe in the same area, briefly shook investors’ confidence
last Wednesday, but failed to impact the country’s mining industry as
severely as the rising swell of investor discontent over recent
Presidential decrees has done.
Initially launched in 2009, the country’s new mining laws require metal producers to refine raw ore in Indonesia before it is exported, and aim to – among other things – force international mining companies to sell off 51 percent of mines to local companies after ten years of production.
While the previous Contracts of Work arrangement had a similar clause
requiring the divestment of ownership by foreign companies, many
foreign coal miners have bemoaned the regulations as a step in the wrong
direction that will scare off future long-term investment in the
country.
Scott Jobin-Bevans, President of the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada,
has said that Indonesia is setting a “dangerous precedent” with a move
that could cumulatively “push up world prices and slow global growth” if
pursued by more governments.
Too tempting to leave
Despite the concerns raised by international miners, many companies
believe that Indonesia’s mining industry, and its coal sector in
particular, is just too tempting to walk away from. Indonesia has become a critical thermal coal supplier to much of the
Asia-Pacific region, with China, Japan, and India collectively driving
the brunt of the country’s production boom for the past eight years. As a
result, Indonesian companies have grown drastically, and in order to
keep up, have continued to increase their production capacity year after
year.
Indonesian coal producer Bayan Resources is projecting that in 2012 production will come in between 18 and 20 MT, up from 15.5 MT in 2011, while Indonesia’s largest coal producer, Bumi Resources, plans to produce between 80 and 85 MT of thermal coal internationally, up from 66 MT the year before.
Strong growth rates and continued untapped coal resources have
provided Indonesia’s government with the certainty that it possesses the
upper hand against international capital. “If [companies] don’t want it, they can get out. We are very strong,” Simon Sembiring, advisor to Indika Energy and former director-general of the Indonesian mining department, told the Sydney Morning Herald.
Sembiring also stated that companies have been lobbying the government
to rescind the laws to avoid potentially losing the financial and
technical capital of current or future international mining groups.
Conversely, the importance of the mining sector, and coal in
particular, to the Indonesian economy has some experts taking the other
side of the bet. “The high economic importance of the mining sector to Indonesia’s
central and regional governments provides a strong incentive for the
government to adopt reasonable regulations that do not materially dent
the sector’s performance or its attractiveness to investors,” Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Xavier Jean told Reuters this week.
Standard & Poor’s believes that it is quite likely that tariffs
or royalty rates will be levied and increased on coal and ore exports,
but suggests that an outright ban on exports is likely to be toned down
or delayed.
Coal prices sluggish
FOB Pinang 6150 6,200 kcal/kg thermal coal fell to US $100.85/MT, down 6.2 percent from March, while Platts reported that the FOB Kalimantan 5,900 kcal/kg 90-day spot price is steady at $90.25/MT.
Weak industrial growth numbers out of China have kept coal trading
lower in recent months, while competing excess supply from the US has
kept prices trading lower on the spot market and negotiated contracts
within the Asia-Pacific basin.
Source: Business Insider
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