Insight
The ink is dry on the Phase 1 US-China trade deal, now what for US coal exports?
Report summary
On 15 January 2020, the US and China signed an encompassing Phase 1 trade agreement valued at US$200B over the next two years. Amongst the trade goods in the deal, China pledges to spend US$52.4B on US energy products including LNG, crude oil, refined products and coal - US$18.5B in 2020 and US$33.9B in 2021. China hasn't been a particularly strong market for US metallurgical exports to China. However, prior to the 1 July 2018 tariff, US metallurgical coal shipments to China were on the rise as mills showed an affinity for certain US coal brands. The proposed energy trade values are massive so where does the trade of metallurgical coal fall in the broader trade plans given likely another year of record crude steel production in China?
Table of contents
- What has the historical US-China trade looked like?
- What US producers stand the benefit from the trade deal?
- What factors affect potential US metallurgical coal exports to China?
- What metallurgical coal volumes could we expect the US to export to China in 2020?
Tables and charts
This report includes 3 images and tables including:
- 2020 Seaborne Metallurgical Coal Cost Curve
- China metallurgical coal imports - value and annual tonnes
What's included
This report contains:
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