Corrected - India's North American coal imports highest since 2015, seen up further on ban

Reuters 

(Corrects first paragraph in Nov. 20 story to say tripled, not quadrupled)

By Sudarshan Varadhan

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's from North America tripled to 2.1 million tonnes in October from a year ago, the highest since at least January 2015, Thomson data showed, and buyers are looking to boost purchases amid a domestic shortage of the fuel.

A ban on the use of petroleum coke, a dirtier but better-burning alternative to coal, is spurring expectations will buy even more from the United States in coming months.

Petcoke has been banned in some states around the Indian capital New Delhi which is battling heavy smog.

But rising pollution in other Indian cities could lead to tougher restrictions such as a nationwide ban on use and of petcoke, with environmentalists requesting other states in the country to consider banning the use and import of the dirty fuel.

Indian of North American coal, including supplies from Canada, stand at about 1.5 million tonnes from Nov. 1 to 20, ship tracking data on Thomson Eikon showed, already more than 70 percent of last month's purchases.

"Every cement company is looking for an alternative to petroleum coke, and all of them are scrambling for U.S. coal," a senior executive from one of India's top three cement companies told

The executive had sold 70,000 tonnes of U.S. to a client, of which the client had paid for 30,000 tonnes. But the executive said he later took back the 40,000 tonnes that was still unpaid, after realising his own company might need it.

Cement companies account for nearly 75 percent of India's annual petcoke demand of 27 million tonnes, according to trade data, and small industries such as lime manufacturers are also considering the use of U.S. coal, which is almost as efficent as petcoke.

A tonne of 6,900 kcal/kg U.S. now costs up to 8,200-8,300 rupees ($126-$128) on online marketplace CoalShastra, up from 7,100-7,200 rupees two weeks ago, said its founder Puneet Gupta.

The petcoke ban may deter Prime Minister Narendra Modi's plan to cut India's imports, which have risen in the past two months.

Vessel-tracking and port data compiled by Thomson Supply Chain and Commodity Forecasts show that imported 17.4 million tonnes of in October, up from September's 16.1 million tonnes and the highest monthly total this year.

($1 = 65.1000 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan; Editing by Manolo Serapio Jr.)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, November 22 2017. 15:09 IST