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Australian Bowen Coking Coal meets FY25 guidance early
Australian Bowen Coking Coal meets FY25 guidance early
Sydney, 20 June (Argus) — Australian coal producer Bowen Coking Coal (BCC) met its production and sales targets for the July 2024-June 2025 financial year by the end of May, the company said 20 June. The company had sold 1.7mn t of coal which came in the middle of its full year guidance of 1.6mn t–1.9mn t. It is on track to hit the upper end of its sales guidance by the end of the current financial year on 30 June. BCC also produced 2.7mn t of run-of-mine (ROM) coal over the same period, hitting the lower end of its full year guidance. It expects to reach the upper end of its guidance by late June. BCC produces both coking and thermal coal. Coking coal accounted for 55pc of the company's total sales over the first nine months of the financial year. It did not give the year-to-date breakdown of thermal and coking coal sales. The company's unit costs for the year are on track to meet the lower end of its guidance, at A$151/t ($98/t). It left its unit cost guidance for 2024-25 financial year unchanged today at A$145/t–A$161/t. BCC's modest unit cost guidance and strong sales performance comes as it faces significant cashflow challenges. It is looking for capital and may need to pause or limit mining operations at the Burton mine complex if it is unable to secure funds. Many producers operating in Australia's Bowen Basin have faced major coal export challenges this year, in contrast to BCC's success. Two coking coal mines in the region — UK-South African producer Anglo American's Moranbah North and global miner Glencore's Oaky Creek — have been non-operational for most of the last two months, over safety and water leak issues. Australian rail operator Aurizon also reported a 4.6mn t year-on-year decline in haulage volumes in the Bowen Basin over January-April 2025 , which pushed down its total haulages by 6.2pc on the year. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Australia's Bowen Coking Coal faces finance challenges
Australia's Bowen Coking Coal faces finance challenges
Sydney, 20 June (Argus) — Bowen Coking Coal (BCC) has become the second Australian coal mining firm this month to seek capital to enable it to continue operating, as weak coal prices have cut cash flow across the industry. BCC has not revealed the amount of money it is looking to raise, but warned today that it may need to temporarily pause or cut production at its 5.5mn t/yr Burton mine complex if it does not secure additional cash. The company is looking into debt, equity and hybrid funding arrangements, but it is not certain that it will be able to secure enough funding to continue operations as usual. BCC's cash flow problems stem from persistent price weakness in the coking and thermal coal markets. Coking coal accounted for 55pc of the company's total sales over July 2024–March 2025 — the first three quarters of the financial year. Argus' 5,500kcal thermal coal price has fallen over the 2024-25 financial year (July-June), from $86.92/t fob Newcastle on 1 July to $66.62/t fob Newcastle on 19 June. Its metallurgical coal premium hard low-volatile fob Australia price declined from $237/t to $175.75/t over the same period. BCC is also facing financial challenges unrelated to prices. Queensland's coal royalty rates — which progressively increase based on commodity prices — are unsustainable and this is putting extreme pressures on producers, the company said. BCC's capital-raising campaign comes just weeks after US-Australian producer Coronado inked a $150mn financing deal with Australian state-owned electricity generator Stanwell, to ease its cash availability challenges. US credit ratings agency Fitch downgraded Coronado's credit rating from B to CCC+ on 14 May, citing volatile premium hard coking coal prices. It does not rate BCC's credit worthiness. Coal firms that rely on longer-term supply contracts and offtake deals are better positioned to manage coal price fluctuations than producers reliant on spot markets. Long-term coal supply deals and offtake agreements often include price floors that protect producers from price swings, easing cyclical pressures. Australian producers of higher-calorific value (CV) coal — around 6,000kcal — are likely facing some pricing difficulties, but have more breathing space than BCC. Australian producer Whitehaven Coal and Chinese-Australian producer Yancoal will probably only start losing money on high-CV operations when prices drop to around $80/t, based on their costs and operating margins. Argus ' 6,000kcal thermal coal price was last assessed at $102.08/t fob Newcastle. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Recent deep-sea and short-sea cfr Turkey scrap deals
Recent deep-sea and short-sea cfr Turkey scrap deals
London, 19 June (Argus) — A summary of the most recent deep-sea and short-sea cfr Turkey ferrous scrap deals seen by Argus. Ferrous scrap deep-sea trades (average composition price, cfr Turkey) Date Volume, t Price, $ Shipment Buyer Seller Composition Index relevant 18-Jun 35,000 339.50 (80:20) July Marmara Baltics/Scan HMS 1/2 80:20, bonus N 17-Jun 27,000 340 (80:20) July Izmir Baltics/Scan HMS 1/2 80:20, shred, bonus Y 13-Jun 25,000 339 (80:20) July Samsun Baltics/Scan HMS 1/2 80:20 Y 11-Jun 40,000 336.50 (80:20) July Marmara Russia HMS 1/2 80:20, shred, bonus Y 2-Jun 35,000 336.50 (80:20) July Izmir UK HMS 1/2 80:20, shred, bonus N 2-Jun 25,000 332 (75:25) July Izmir Cont. Europe HMS 1/2 75:25 N 2-Jun 40,000 340.50 (80:20) July Marmara Baltics/Scan HMS 1/2 80:20, shred, bonus Y Ferrous scrap short-sea trades (average composition price, cif Marmara) Date Volume, t Price, $ Shipment Buyer Seller Composition Index relevant 20-May 3,000 328 (80:20) May Marmara Cont. Europe HMS 1/2 80:20 Y Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
ArcelorMittal halts DRI-EAF projects in the EU
ArcelorMittal halts DRI-EAF projects in the EU
London, 19 June (Argus) — Luxembourg-based steelmaker ArcelorMittal said it will not proceed with previously announced direct-reduced iron (DRI) and electric arc furnace (EAF) decarbonisation projects at Bremen and Eisenhuttenstadt in Germany, citing the unfavourable policy and market environment. The company initially planned to supply DRI from Bremen to the EAF in Eisenhuttenstadt after their construction. But in November last year, the company said it was unable to take final investment decisions on building the DRI-EAF assets in the EU because of challenging energy, policy and market environments that were not moving in a favourable direction. ArcelorMittal this week announced that it will carry out repair works on blast furnace 5A at its Eisenhuttenstadt site next week until 28 June, similar to the repairs last year. The blast furnace has capacity of 2.5mn t/yr. The company has urged the EU to accelerate enforcement of the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), strengthen trade protections and implement the EU Metals Action Plan to restore the competitiveness of low-emissions steel. In May, ArcelorMittal confirmed its intention to invest €1.2bn in a new EAF at its Dunkirk site in France. Market participants suggest the company was delaying its DRI investments in Ghent, Belgium, and Dunkirk, but the steelmaker has yet to comment. The French government in 2023 approved an €850mn grant to ArcelorMittal to decarbonise its Dunkirk asset. By Elif Eyuboglu Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
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