When the term
“black gold” is used, it usually pertains to oil. Coal, one of the
oldest sources of energy used by man, has long been a poor cousin.
However, in an era of higher oil prices and apprehension over future
supply, coal no longer looks so bad. This is certainly the case in
China, where the industry is beginning the process of a major
overhaul. According to the OECD, the Chinese economy has expanded at
an average of 9.5 percent over the past two decades and “seems
likely to continue at that pace for some time.” To maintain that
pace of growth, China must tap all of its energy resources, including
coal.
China is the
world’s largest producer of coal. While a small amount of that coal
reaches foreign markets, most of it is destined for use at home.
Indeed, coal accounts for roughly two thirds of China’s energy
needs. And demand for coal has only increased over the past few years.
Wholesale coal prices (which have been deregulated) rose 40 percent in
2004, pushed along by world market prices and a 56 percent rise in
electricity demand between 1999 and 2003. This heavy rate of demand is
not expected to stop anytime soon. According to the China Electricity
Council, power consumption in China may rise 11 percent to 2.73
megawatt-hours next year.
Although China’s
coal sector has played an important role in the country’s
industrialization, it has been a very fragmented business, filled with
inefficiencies. At a time of very strong demand, these inefficiencies
are constraining the country’s growth potential – old and unsafe
mines waste capital and labor, while transportation systems are
inadequate for getting get coal to factories and electrical utilities.
Furthermore, the
unsafe nature of older mines has made China’s coal industry one of
the most dangerous in the world. According to official sources, around
6,000 miners are killed a year in the coal industry, usually due to
gas leaks. According to the official Xinhua News Agency (October 14,
2005), the coal industry suffered 2,357 accidents that killed 4,226
people between January 1, 2005 and September 30, 2005.
But change is coming
to China's coal industry. The pressing demand for steady sources of
energy is forcing Beijing to tighten regulations (ordering the closure
of small unsafe mines), curtail the ownership of officials in the
sector, and push for consolidation. And consolidation is critical if
the coal industry is to support the country economic growth over a
sustained period.
The top ten coal
mining groups make up just 15 production of the country’s production
capacity. At the same time, smaller mines accounted for 38 percent of
coal production in 2004. This is hardly an efficient system. In most
other major coal producing countries, production is much more
concentrated in the upper echelon of companies. Consequently, Beijing
announced that it plans to form six to eight large coal-producing
groups, each with the capacity of more than 100 million tones per
year. Along these lines, in December 2004, Heilongjiang Long Mei
Mining Group was formed by the merger of four large coal mines. It is
now considering an overseas listing.
China has another
reason to consolidate the coal industry – pollution. As the 2005
OECD study on China noted: “The major environmental problem is air
pollution that stems from the use of a coal supply that has relatively
high sulfur content.” Less polluting coal is possible, but it
requires capaital, something well beyond small enterprises.
The coal industry in
China as it stands today will not be the same in five years. The
sector will be more driven by market forces as the state retreats from
ownership and foreign and Chinese private sector ownership becomes
more pronounced. The number of companies will shrink and the
technology will improve. And demand (which may slump in the short
term) will continue to be a strong factor considering China’s need
for further economic growth. For the shrewd international investor the
coal sector should be worth watching. There is one listed Chinese coal
company on the NYSE, Yanzhou Coal Mining – YZC. We expect more to
come.