1 MAJOR STRATEGIC SECTOR PROJECTS TO BE IMPLEMENTED IN COOPERATION WITH WORLD BANK WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      2 GOVERNMENT APPROVES NEW ADMINISTRATIVE BUILDING AT ULAANBAATAR INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      3 MONGOLIA’S CRISIS IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO TRANSFORM ITS SYSTEM WWW.JACOBIN.COM PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      4 MONGOLIA'S CENTRAL BANK BUYS 1.9 TONNES OF GOLD IN JANUARY WWW.XINHUANET.COM PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      5 TEAM MONGOLIA IS GEARING UP TO BE THE MOST FASHIONABLY WARM AT THE 2026 WINTER OLYMPICS. HERE'S WHY WWW.CREATORS.YAHOO.COM PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      6 ERDENE RAISES $28.7 MILLION TO ACCELERATE MONGOLIAN COPPER-GOLD EXPANSION WWW.TIPRANKS.COM  PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      7 HUNGARIAN OTP BANK EXPRESSES INTEREST IN OPERATING IN MONGOLIA WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/02/06      8 OYU TOLGOI: MONGOLIA’S HIGH-STAKES CLASH WITH RIO TINTO WWW.THEDIPLOMAT.COM PUBLISHED:2026/02/05      9 MONGOLIA PREPARES INTERNATIONAL TENDER TO BUILD STEEL PLANT WWW.AZERTAG.AZ  PUBLISHED:2026/02/05      10 RUSSIAN DEPUTY PM EXPECTS AGREEMENTS ON FREE TRADE AREAS WITH UAE, MONGOLIA, INDONESIA TO TAKE EFFECT IN 2026 WWW.INTERFAX.COM PUBLISHED:2026/02/05      СОНГИНОХАЙРХАН ДҮҮРГИЙН БАРУУН САЛААНЫ ГОЛЫН АЙ САВД ХӨВ ЦӨӨРӨМ БАЙГУУЛНА WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     СТРАТЕГИЙН САЛБАРЫН ТОМООХОН ТӨСЛҮҮДИЙГ ДЭЛХИЙН БАНКТАЙ ХАМТРАН ХЭРЭГЖҮҮЛНЭ WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     Ш.АЛТАНТУЯА АГСНЫ ГЭР БҮЛ 4.7 САЯ РИНГГИТИЙГ МАЛАЙЗАД БУЦААН ОЛГОЖЭЭ WWW.NEWS.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     НИЙСЛЭЛИЙН ХЭМЖЭЭНД 4113 ТЕЛЕ КАМЕРЫГ НЭГДСЭН БОЛОН ДЭД ТӨВД ХОЛБОЛОО WWW.ITOIM.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     МАНСУУРУУЛАХ БОДИСТОЙ ХОЛБООТОЙ ГЭМТ ХЭРЭГ 21.6 ХУВИАР ӨСЖЭЭ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     НИЙСЛЭЛИЙН УСНЫ ХАНГАМЖИЙГ НЭМЭГДҮҮЛЭХ ТӨСӨЛ ИРЭХ САРД ХЭРЭГЖИЖ ДУУСНА WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     МАЛ ХУЛГАЙЛЖ, БЭЛЧЭЭРТ НЬ НЯДАЛДАГ БҮЛЭГ ЭТГЭЭДИЙГ БАРИВЧИЛЖЭЭ WWW.NEWS.MN  НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/06     УНГАРЫН ОТП БАНК МОНГОЛД ҮЙЛ АЖИЛЛАГАА ЯВУУЛАХ ХҮСЭЛТЭЭ ИЛЭРХИЙЛЛЭЭ WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/05     Г.ЗАНДАНШАТАР: ТӨСВИЙН ХӨРӨНГӨӨР ХАЙГУУЛ ХИЙСЭН ОРДУУДЫН ӨГӨӨЖИЙГ АРД ТҮМЭНД ХҮРТЭЭХ НЬ ЗҮЙ ЁСНЫ АСУУДАЛ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/05     БАЙГАЛЬ ОРЧНЫ АУДИТЫН ТУСГАЙ ЗӨВШӨӨРЛИЙГ ЦАХИМААР ОЛГОЖ ЭХЭЛЛЭЭ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/02/05    

China coking coal imports down 25 per cent due to Australia, Mongolia ‘gap’ caused by unofficial ban, border closure www.scmp.com

China’s imports of coking coal plummeted in 2021, as the country strived to diversify its sources amid an unofficial ban on Australian coal and coronavirus pandemic-hit Mongolian imports, analysts said.
China imported 54.7 million tonnes of coking coal – an essential ingredient in the production of steel – last year, down by 24.6 per cent from 2020, according to official data.
“Even though demand for non-Australian seaborne coal imports was strong, it still could not make up for the gap left by Australian and Mongolian coal [imports],” said Jia Na, a coal analyst with the Shanxi-based Today Think Tank, on Monday.
Among the coking coal imports, 11.3 per cent or 6.17 million tonnes, was imported from Australia since October, when China started to allow Australian coal that had been stranded at its ports in the wake of Beijing’s import ban which started in October 2020.
Some 5.54 million tonnes of Australian thermal coal, which is used for power generation, was also imported in the final three months of last year when the country was faced with a power crunch due to a severe coal supply shortage.
Most of the Australian coal that was being held at Chinese ports has now been cleared, Jia added.
There is, though, no sign of a wholesale lifting of the unofficial coal ban that will allow new shipments from Australia, analysts said.
China imposed unofficial bans on the imports of a variety of Australian products – including coal, lobsters and log timers – in late 2020, after Canberra supported calls for an international investigation into China’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak.
If anything, similar to the current market situation, the trade dispute impact will be more greatly felt by Australian metallurgical coal producers and Chinese steel mills, rather than thermal coal producers and Chinese power utilities
China and Australia will continue to seek alternative trade partners in 2022, according to S&P Global Platts last month.
“If anything, similar to the current market situation, the trade dispute impact will be more greatly felt by Australian metallurgical coal producers and Chinese steel mills, rather than thermal coal producers and Chinese power utilities,” the note said.
With rising demand from other Asian markets and the European Union for Australian coking coal, the supply chains disrupted by China’s informal import restrictions have largely been reorganised, according to “The Resources and Energy Quarterly” report produced by the Australian government in December.
China had previously relied heavily on Australia and Mongolia for coking coal, with combined imports accounting for 86.7 per cent of total imports in 2019, according to Wu Wenxin, a coal analyst with sxcoal.com.
Mongolia was China’s biggest source for coking coal last year, but the supply was heavily impacted by virus-induced border closures and restriction at major land ports, analysts said.
In 2021, China imported 14.04 million tonnes of coking coal from Mongolia, down by 40.93 per cent compared with a year earlier.
Steel mills have as a result turned to other sources for coking coal, with imports from Russia up by nearly 60 per cent to 10.67 million tonnes in 2021.
Indonesia imposes ban on coal exports out of fear of power outages
Shipments from the United States also surged almost tenfold to 10.18 million tonnes, while imports from Canada also almost doubled to 9.27 million tonnes, according to Chinese customs data.
It is expected that China’s appetite for imported coking coal may partially recover this year, but is still not expected to reach the pre-pandemic level, according December’s “The Resources and Energy Quarterly”, which forecasts for the value, volume and price of Australia’s major resources and energy commodity exports.
“Steel output in China may also slow in line with industrial production and [gross domestic product] growth, which are both softening,” the report said.
BY: Ji Siqi joined the Post in 2020 and covers China economy. She graduated from Columbia Journalism School and the University of Hong Kong.
 
 
 


Published Date:2022-01-27