Thermal Coal Eases from 1-Month High
2026-05-11 11:15
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
Thermal coal futures eased to $130 per tonne from the one-month peak of $135.6 on May 4th, tracking slight pullback in Asian and European natural gas prices as markets assessed the availability of feedstock for power plants in the respective regions.
Natural gas prices came off their peaks after the US and Iran agreed to a ceasefire, despite is fragility.
Also, reports indicated that Adnoc has been able to ship some LNG despite the Hormuz blockade.
Still, the tightness in global LNG availability maintained thermal coal futures over 20% higher year-to-date.
The squeeze in LNG supplies due to the war in Iran for Asia drove major economies to depend on thermal coal for their power generation, lifting the bidding prices for power plant feedstock.
The switching was even more drastic for Japan and Korea, which are the top consumers of high-grade thermal coal out of Australia.
April imports of thermal coal in grew 40% to 5.7 million in Korea and 2.5% to 7.9 million tons in Japan.