‘Politics come first’ as ban on Australian coal worsens China’s power cuts

Factories and street lights shut down to save energy as embargo contributes to 
shortages

Chinese energy and industrial groups say problems with electricity supplies are 
partly due to an embargo on Australian coal imports © AP

https://www.ft.com/content/e83fffeb-3ef2-4b67-8989-6d17f153d8d4
By Sun Yu in Beijing YESTERDAY


Factories across China are falling silent and office workers are being forced 
to climb the stairs of high-rise buildings as a ban on Australian coal worsens 
a power shortage that is hitting everything from street lights to lifts.

In recent weeks, more than a dozen Chinese cities have imposed restrictions on 
electricity use as growing demand for energy owing to the country’s 
post-coronavirus economic recovery collides head on with a shortage of thermal 
coal.

The shortage underscores the dilemma Chinese authorities face in balancing 
their muscular approach to international diplomacy with the needs of the 
economy.

Chinese energy and industrial groups have said the problem is partly due to an 
embargo on Australian coal imports, which many power plants in the country 
depend on, as tensions between Beijing and Canberra simmer.

“The import curb is enough to change the industry landscape,” said a director 
at China Huadian Corporation, one of the nation’s largest energy groups. “Many 
local power plants depend on Australian coal due to its higher efficiency and 
now they are having trouble finding an alternative.”

The problem has worsened as a rebound in China’s economy has gained momentum in 
the past few months.

Authorities in at least four Chinese provinces have recently asked residents 
and businesses to cut electricity consumption, according to public 
announcements.

We are not living a normal life when our factory can only work two days a week 
and the streets are dark at night.
Mike Li, factory owner

Officials in Hunan, central China, announced this month that government 
agencies would cut their electricity use and half of the province’s street 
lights would be turned off at night to tackle “tightening” power supplies.

Dozens of high-rise buildings in Changsha, the provincial capital, last week 
switched off power to their lifts, forcing workers to climb up to 20 flights of 
stairs to get to their offices.

“I've never had so much trouble going to the office,” said a Changsha-based 
office worker, who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of 
the subject. He was trapped in a lift for 40 minutes last week because of a 
power shortage.

Yiwu, a city in eastern China known for making products such as flags and 
badges, has not only switched off all its street lights during the evening but 
has forced factories to cut working hours by up to 80 per cent until the end of 
this year.

“We are not living a normal life when our factory can only work two days a week 
and the streets are dark at night,” said Mike Li, owner of a plastic flower 
factory in Yiwu.

Chinese authorities have blamed these problems on a combination of an unusually 
cold winter in parts of the country and high energy demand.

Power plants, however, said their operation had also suffered from the 
suspension of Australian coal imports.

Official data show Chinese plants obtained about 3 per cent of their thermal 
coal from Australia last year. The ratio, said an official at trade association 
the China Electricity Council, could exceed 10 per cent in more developed 
provinces that are drawn to the high quality of Australian coal.

“The import ban doesn’t make economic sense,” said the official.

China’s coal mines are also struggling to fill the shortfall because of 
tightening environmental regulations. Official data show China’s coal output 
rose 1.5 per cent year on year in November, compared with a 6.6 per cent gain 
in thermal power production in the same period.

That combination has hit energy supplies and sent prices soaring. Thermal coal 
inventories in Qinghuangdao, a big Chinese commodity port, are near a two-year 
low while prices have surged almost two-thirds since May, according to SunSirs, 
a consultancy.

That has forced many power plants to cut back on production, but some do not 
expect a resolution to the issue anytime soon given the parlous state of 
relations between Australia and China.

“We don’t expect the government to relax import control just because of the 
trouble it has caused,” said the official at Huaidan Corp. “Politics come 
first.”

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