COALspot.com keeps you connected across the coal world

Submit Your Articles
We welcome article submissions from experts in the areas of coal, mining, shipping, etc.

To Submit your article please click here.

International Energy Events


Search News
Latest CoalNews Headlines
Tuesday, 04 August 20
THE WORLD’S FLEET OF COAL-FIRED POWER STATIONS HAS GOT SMALLER FOR THE FIRST TIME ON RECORD, WITH MORE CAPACITY RETIRED IN THE FIRST HALF OF 2020 THAN THE AMOUNT OPENED - IEA
IEA clean coal logoThis is according to the latest Global Coal Plant Tracker (GCPT) results by Global Energy Monitor (GEM), which we completed last month and report for the first time here. The 2.9 gigawatt (GW) decline in the first half (H1) of 2020 takes the global total down to 2,047GW. The fall – including a decline in India – was due to a combination of slowed commissioning due to the Covid-19 pandemic and record retirements in the EU from strengthened pollution regulations.
 
Nevertheless, our new figures show that 189.8GW of coal power capacity is still under construction globally and another 331.9GW is in planning. This runs counter to calls from UN secretary general António Guterres for a global moratorium on new coal plants after 2020. New coal plant development in H1 2020 was predominantly concentrated in China, which has increased its coal proposals and permits, while much of the world has put coal plans on pause.
 
Outside China, operating coal power capacity already peaked in 2018 – a trend that looks to hold as planned retirements outside China exceed planned commissioning. These shifts mean China is for the first time now home to half the world’s operating coal fleet.
 
Despite the decline in the global coal fleet, meeting global climate goals requires a much more rapid reduction in coal power use, with generation falling by at least half this decade in pathways that limit warming to well-below 2C, and up to three-fourths for 1.5C.
 
First fall in 2020
This year has witnessed the first six-month period on record when more coal-fired capacity was retired than commissioned. From 1 January to 30 June, 18.3GW started operating and 21.2GW retired, leading to a net decline in the global coal fleet of 2.9GW, shown in the chart below.
 
Commissioning in 2020 was led by China (11.4GW) and Japan (1.8GW). Germany’s newly opened 1.1 GW Datteln coal plant will have to be retired as the country phases out coal by 2038.
 
In terms of retirements during H1 2020, the bulk were in the EU27 plus UK (-8.3GW) – discussed in more detail below – followed by the US (-5.4GW) and China (-1.7GW).
 
Whereas H1 2020 marked the first overall global decline (solid line in the chart below), coal power capacity has already been in decline since 2018 outside China (dotted line).
 
The net change in global coal power capacity (solid black line) between 2000 and H1 2020. Country-by-country additions (positive) and retirements (negative) are shown with coloured columns. Source: Global Coal Plant Tracker, July 2020. Chart by Carbon Brief using Highcharts.
This declining trend outside China is likely to hold: some 98.6GW of coal power is already marked for retirement through to 2024, exceeding the 91.3GW currently under construction. (The median construction time for coal plants outside China is five years.)
 
Drop driven by the EU
The decline in global coal power capacity was driven primarily by the EU and UK, which saw a 8.3GW net reduction in capacity in the first half of 2020. This is the largest half-year drop on record, with only 2016 seeing a larger net reduction of 8.7GW across 12 months (see chart below). With another 6.0GW of coal closures scheduled for the second half of this year, the EU is on course to set a clear annual retirement record for the full year of 2020.
 
The net change in EU+UK coal power capacity (solid black line) between 2000 and H1 2020. Country-by-country additions (positive) and retirements (negative) are shown with coloured columns. Source: Global Coal Plant Tracker, July 2020. Chart by Carbon Brief using Highcharts.
Retirements in the EU+UK were driven by the rising price of EU carbon allowances and tightening pollution regulations, both of which have cut into the profitability of coal plants.
 
In H1 2020, EU27 coal use fell by 32%, as lower power demand from the Covid-19 pandemic primarily affected coal plants due to their higher operating costs.
 
Citing the declining profitability of its coal plants, power company EDP recently announced two coal plant closures in Portugal, putting the country on track to be coal-free by 2021 – two years ahead of schedule.
 
Altogether, 19 EU countries and the UK have committed to phase out coal power generation by 2030, with Germany targeting 2038. This leaves seven member states yet to agree to a phaseout: Spain, Poland, Czechia, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovenia and Croatia.
 
Radical reductions in Spain and the UK
While Spain has not yet committed to a coal phaseout, the country retired half its fleet in June 2020 (4.8 of 9.6GW), before the expiration of exemptions from EU pollution limits. The retirements were preceded by a 58% annual drop in Spain’s coal power generation, from 8.0 terawatt-hours (TWh) in H1 2019 to 3.3TWh in H1 2020, shown in the chart below.
 
The UK also retired a significant chunk of its coal fleet in the first half of 2020, closing more than a third of its remaining plants (3.3 of 9.6GW, or 34%). At the same time, the British electricity grid was coal-free for more than two months.
 
UK coal power generation has declined by more than 95% from an average of 65TWh every six months during 2000–2010 to just 3TWh in the first half of 2020, suggesting the country may well exit coal before its 2025 phaseout deadline.
 
Concentrated in China
The coal power industry continues to be concentrated in a handful of countries, with just ten comprising 90% of the pipeline for new coal plants and 86% of the operating fleet. China alone is now home to half of all operating coal power capacity (50%), as well as half of capacity in the pipeline (48%), up from a 34% share of the global coal pipeline in mid-2018. 
 
Coal power capacity in planning and under construction by country and percent share (left). Operating coal power capacity by country and percent share (right). Source: Global Coal Plant Tracker, July 2020. China also dominated coal plant development in the first half of 2020, making up 90% of newly proposed capacity (53.2 of 59.4GW), 86% of new construction (12.8 of 15.0GW) and 62% of plant openings (11.4 of 18.3GW). This is shown in the figure, below.
 
From 1 January to 30 June 2020, Chinese provinces granted permits for 19.7GW of new coal capacity, the highest rate since the central government began restricting permitting in 2016. Most of this activity has taken place since March, raising concerns that provinces are regarding coal plants as a form of post-covid economic stimulus to counter the financial slowdown. Central government moves to limit the surge have so far lacked teeth. Analysis by the University of Maryland warns the continuing build-out of large amounts of coal power will exacerbate China’s overcapacity crisis, lowering the average utilisation rate for its coal plants from below 50% today to below 45% by 2025, with negative consequences for profitability.
 
Slowdown outside China
Outside China, plans for new coal development radically slowed in 2020, with fresh proposals and construction starts occurring in just seven countries. India has been reducing its share of global coal power development, from 17% of the world pipeline in mid-2018 to 12% in mid-2020. The country also had no new construction in H1 2020 and shrank its coal fleet by 0.3GW – an unthinkable prospect just a few years ago.
 
In southeast Asia – regarded as one of the biggest growth markets for coal – only 1GW of coal power was newly proposed and 0.8GW started construction in H1 2020. This is 70% lower than the average 2.9GW of new proposals and 2.7GW of new construction every six months in the region since 2015. The decline in southeast Asia comes as two of the region’s largest financial backers of new coal plants – Japan and South Korea – face continued publicpressure to end their support of the technology.
 
So far, the governments have instead opted for tightened restrictions, although South Korea lawmakers will soon be deciding on a set of bills that would end the country’s public support for coal projects abroad. The growing restrictions have made coal plant financing increasingly difficult to secure and Chinese banks the lenders of last resort.
 
In south Asia, Bangladesh’s state minister for power recently announced that the country may restrict future coal plant additions to just three coal power plants that are under construction: Matarbari, Rampal, and Payra. This would effectively cancel the remaining 17.9GW of planned coal power. In June 2020, Pakistan canceled plans for the 0.7GW Port Qasim power station, as the country deals with economic problems at two of its recently commissioned coal plants, financed by Chinese firms.
 
Notably, some of the world’s largest coal plant proposals were called off or scaled down in 2020, suggesting coal “megaprojects” face diminishing prospects as alternative power sources cut into their potential operating hours and profitability.
 
In February 2020, for example, Egypt’s ministry of electricity said it would postpone construction of the 6.6GW Hamrawein coal plant to launch a renewable energy project instead. With the decision, Egypt has shelved or canceled all 15.2GW of new coal power it had previously planned. Russia also scaled down plans for its proposed Erkovetskaya coal plant, from 8.0GW in 2013 to 1.0GW.
 
Coal and climate goals
Despite the decline in commissioning and development, global coal use – and its associated CO2 release – is expected to fall only very slowly over the next decade. Yet emissions from coal use need to plummet by 2030 in pathways that meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.
 
Looking specifically at the power sector, coal use falls roughly in half by 2030 (53%) in pathways that limit warming to well-below 2C and by three-quarters (73%) in those that keep warming below 1.5C, according to GEM’s analysis of pathways considered by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) special report on 1.5C (SR15). These figures are for scenarios with “no or low overshoot” of the temperature target and no carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) for coal plants, since few commercial coal plants have or are planning to deploy the technology, making widespread adoption over the next decade unlikely.
 
The figures are similar to those in recent analysis by Carbon Brief, which found CO2 emissions from all uses of coal – both power and industrial – fall by up to 80% below current levels in 2030 in 1.5C pathways, and by 42-70% in well-below 2C scenarios. Even excluding the pipeline of new coal developments, there is already far more than enough coal capacity to breach these climate-compliant pathways. The figure below shows the amount of coal generation implied by the IPCC scenarios (black lines) against an estimate of the output from existing plants. This estimate assumes coal plants operate for 40 years before closure and run at a 51% “load factor”, matching the current global average.
 
The Powering Past Coal Alliance (PPCA) estimates that 58% of EU and OECD countries will be coal-free by 2030. The US – home to 13% of global capacity, which is second only to China – is notably not on this list.
 
Japan is also not among the OECD countries planning a coal phaseout. While the Japanese government recently announced plans for the retirement of 100 “inefficient” coal-fired units by 2030, analysis by Japan-based Kiko Network concludes the plan could leave more than 35GW of coal power operating in 2030. (Carbon Brief analysis reached a similar conclusion.)
 
For China, recent research suggests it would be cheaper to rapidly build up renewables than to continue expanding coal capacity. Another study found that the cost-optimal path to limit stranded assets in China’s coal sector was an immediate moratorium on new construction, a 20- to 30-year limit on coal-plant lifespans, and a phased reduction in the utilisation rates of remaining capacity.
 
Countries around the world are moving to stimulate their economies after the coronavirus pandemic. In that context, recovery efforts could prioritize replacing coal with clean energy, as recent analysis led by thinktank CarbonTracker suggests it is already cheaper to build new renewable power than to continue operating 60% of the global coal fleet, rising to 100% of the coal fleet by 2030.
Source: IEA Clean Coal Centre


If you believe an article violates your rights or the rights of others, please contact us.

Recent News

Wednesday, 02 September 20
MARKET INSIGHT - INTERMODAL
The imminent global shift towards eco-friendliness has caused divide among the shipping community because there is no outlined, clear-cut way via w ...


Wednesday, 02 September 20
INDONESIA COAL PRICE REFERENCE DIVES FURTHER IN SEPTEMBER DUE TO SUBDUED DEMAND & GLOBAL OVERSUPPLY
Subdued demand & global oversupply pushed down this month's HBA   COALspot.com: The Indonesia Coal Price Reference ...


Tuesday, 01 September 20
WHY INDIA CAN'T MATCH THE GULF REGION'S RECORD-LOW SOLAR TARIFFS - IEEFA
5-10% annual decline in tariffs estimated for the next decade A number of countries in the Gulf region have set record-low prices for solar in ...


Tuesday, 01 September 20
COVID-19 PUSHES US LNG INTO A TIGHT SPOT - DREWRY
The pandemic-led weak projections for economic growth will derail US LNG exports in full-year 2020 with the country also losing ground in the long ...


Monday, 31 August 20
DEFECTIVE PASSAGE PLANNING: UNSEAWORTHINESS OR A NAVIGATIONAL DECISION? THE CMA CGM LIBRA QUESTION SAILS ON TO THE UK SUPREME COURT - GARD
KNOWLEDGE TO ELEVATE The UK Supreme Court has granted leave to appeal the recent decision in Alize 1954 v Allianz Elementar Versicherungs AG ( ...


   159 160 161 162 163   
Showing 801 to 805 news of total 6871
News by Category
Popular News
 
Total Members : 28,619
Member
Panelist
User ID
Password
Remember Me
By logging on you accept our TERMS OF USE.
Free
Register
Forgot Password
 
Our Members Are From ...

  • Africa Commodities Group - South Africa
  • LBH Netherlands Bv - Netherlands
  • Shree Cement - India
  • Renaissance Capital - South Africa
  • Cosco
  • Ministry of Transport, Egypt
  • Standard Chartered Bank - UAE
  • Siam City Cement PLC, Thailand
  • Mercator Lines Limited - India
  • Infraline Energy - India
  • Adani Power Ltd - India
  • Orica Australia Pty. Ltd.
  • Straits Asia Resources Limited - Singapore
  • Borneo Indobara - Indonesia
  • Maruti Cements - India
  • Therma Luzon, Inc, Philippines
  • Bangladesh Power Developement Board
  • Indonesia Power. PT
  • Cargill India Pvt Ltd
  • GN Power Mariveles Coal Plant, Philippines
  • Thomson Reuters GRC
  • McKinsey & Co - India
  • GMR Energy Limited - India
  • Meenaskhi Energy Private Limited - India
  • PTC India Limited - India
  • Tamil Nadu electricity Board
  • Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd
  • Total Coal South Africa
  • GAC Shipping (India) Pvt Ltd
  • Ind-Barath Power Infra Limited - India
  • Truba Alam Manunggal Engineering.Tbk - Indonesia
  • Glencore India Pvt. Ltd
  • SMC Global Power, Philippines
  • UBS Singapore
  • Barasentosa Lestari - Indonesia
  • Manunggal Multi Energi - Indonesia
  • MS Steel International - UAE
  • RBS Sempra - UK
  • India Bulls Power Limited - India
  • Samsung - South Korea
  • Binh Thuan Hamico - Vietnam
  • IHS Mccloskey Coal Group - USA
  • Dalmia Cement Bharat India
  • PLN - Indonesia
  • NTPC Limited - India
  • Samtan Co., Ltd - South Korea
  • Cardiff University - UK
  • Mitsui
  • Platou - Singapore
  • Bukit Makmur.PT - Indonesia
  • CESC Limited - India
  • BNP Paribas - Singapore
  • Anglo American - United Kingdom
  • Humpuss - Indonesia
  • Global Business Power Corporation, Philippines
  • Kobe Steel Ltd - Japan
  • Bulk Trading Sa - Switzerland
  • Siam City Cement - Thailand
  • Formosa Plastics Group - Taiwan
  • Gujarat Sidhee Cement - India
  • Bayan Resources Tbk. - Indonesia
  • Meralco Power Generation, Philippines
  • Tata Power - India
  • Uttam Galva Steels Limited - India
  • Core Mineral Indonesia
  • bp singapore
  • Cigading International Bulk Terminal - Indonesia
  • Goldman Sachs - Singapore
  • Eastern Coal Council - USA
  • Gupta Coal India Ltd
  • Mercuria Energy - Indonesia
  • Gujarat Mineral Development Corp Ltd - India
  • Kartika Selabumi Mining - Indonesia
  • Star Paper Mills Limited - India
  • Bhushan Steel Limited - India
  • Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission - India
  • Dr Ramakrishna Prasad Power Pvt Ltd - India
  • KEPCO - South Korea
  • Xstrata Coal
  • EMO - The Netherlands
  • Bhatia International Limited - India
  • Indian School of Mines
  • Bahari Cakrawala Sebuku - Indonesia
  • The India Cements Ltd
  • Reliance Power - India
  • The University of Queensland
  • CCIC - Indonesia
  • Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited - India
  • Vijayanagar Sugar Pvt Ltd - India
  • Karbindo Abesyapradhi - Indoneisa
  • SASOL - South Africa
  • World Coal - UK
  • Trasteel International SA, Italy
  • GB Group - China
  • Semirara Mining and Power Corporation, Philippines
  • Commonwealth Bank - Australia
  • Toyota Tsusho Corporation, Japan
  • Sojitz Corporation - Japan
  • Indonesian Coal Mining Association
  • IOL Indonesia
  • Runge Indonesia
  • KOWEPO - South Korea
  • Kobexindo Tractors - Indoneisa
  • Geoservices-GeoAssay Lab
  • Riau Bara Harum - Indonesia
  • Carbofer General Trading SA - India
  • NALCO India
  • Miang Besar Coal Terminal - Indonesia
  • Kaltim Prima Coal - Indonesia
  • Pipit Mutiara Jaya. PT, Indonesia
  • Petrochimia International Co. Ltd.- Taiwan
  • ING Bank NV - Singapore
  • Billiton Holdings Pty Ltd - Australia
  • Peabody Energy - USA
  • Coal Orbis AG
  • Fearnleys - India
  • Simpson Spence & Young - Indonesia
  • Altura Mining Limited, Indonesia
  • Cemex - Philippines
  • Sree Jayajothi Cements Limited - India
  • Asian Development Bank
  • Coalindo Energy - Indonesia
  • IEA Clean Coal Centre - UK
  • Tata Chemicals Ltd - India
  • World Bank
  • New Zealand Coal & Carbon
  • Timah Investasi Mineral - Indoneisa
  • Agrawal Coal Company - India
  • Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd - Australia
  • SUEK AG - Indonesia
  • Coeclerici Indonesia
  • Bharathi Cement Corporation - India
  • Coaltrans Conferences
  • Qatrana Cement - Jordan
  • Shenhua Group - China
  • Moodys - Singapore
  • Kepco SPC Power Corporation, Philippines
  • Ince & co LLP
  • Gresik Semen - Indonesia
  • Makarim & Taira - Indonesia
  • European Bulk Services B.V. - Netherlands
  • Singapore Mercantile Exchange
  • Indian Oil Corporation Limited
  • Sakthi Sugars Limited - India
  • Mitsubishi Corporation
  • Vale Mozambique
  • JPower - Japan
  • PowerSource Philippines DevCo
  • Alfred C Toepfer International GmbH - Germany
  • Lanco Infratech Ltd - India
  • SMG Consultants - Indonesia
  • PetroVietnam
  • Tanito Harum - Indonesia
  • Mechel - Russia
  • Malco - India
  • TRAFIGURA, South Korea
  • Lafarge - France
  • TeaM Sual Corporation - Philippines
  • Port Waratah Coal Services - Australia
  • Petron Corporation, Philippines
  • Jorong Barutama Greston.PT - Indonesia
  • Power Finance Corporation Ltd., India
  • Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand
  • Jindal Steel & Power Ltd - India
  • Clarksons - UK
  • Bukit Baiduri Energy - Indonesia
  • Rio Tinto Coal - Australia
  • Essar Steel Hazira Ltd - India
  • Sucofindo - Indonesia
  • GVK Power & Infra Limited - India
  • Wilmar Investment Holdings
  • Coal and Oil Company - UAE
  • Energy Link Ltd, New Zealand
  • Interocean Group of Companies - India
  • EIA - United States
  • Directorate Of Revenue Intelligence - India
  • Maersk Broker
  • Oldendorff Carriers - Singapore
  • Dong Bac Coal Mineral Investment Coporation - Vietnam
  • Credit Suisse - India
  • Deloitte Consulting - India
  • Global Green Power PLC Corporation, Philippines
  • J M Baxi & Co - India
  • Sarangani Energy Corporation, Philippines
  • Globalindo Alam Lestari - Indonesia
  • Offshore Bulk Terminal Pte Ltd, Singapore
  • ANZ Bank - Australia
  • Metalloyd Limited - United Kingdom
  • Rudhra Energy - India
  • GHCL Limited - India
  • South Luzon Thermal Energy Corporation
  • PNOC Exploration Corporation - Philippines
  • Indika Energy - Indonesia
  • Jatenergy - Australia
  • Coastal Gujarat Power Limited - India
  • OCBC - Singapore
  • Panama Canal Authority
  • Cebu Energy, Philippines
  • Central Electricity Authority - India
  • Kideco Jaya Agung - Indonesia
  • Romanian Commodities Exchange
  • PLN Batubara - Indonesia
  • Petrosea - Indonesia
  • Berau Coal - Indonesia
  • Coal India Limited
  • TNB Fuel Sdn Bhd - Malaysia
  • San Jose City I Power Corp, Philippines
  • Cement Manufacturers Association - India
  • Bank of America
  • Latin American Coal - Colombia
  • Aboitiz Power Corporation - Philippines
  • Bank of China, Malaysia
  • Indian Energy Exchange, India
  • Antam Resourcindo - Indonesia
  • Russian Coal LLC
  • ETA - Dubai
  • Global Coal Blending Company Limited - Australia
  • Medco Energi Mining Internasional
  • Parry Sugars Refinery, India
  • Pendopo Energi Batubara - Indonesia
  • Intertek Mineral Services - Indonesia
  • Krishnapatnam Port Company Ltd. - India
  • Planning Commission, India
  • Central Java Power - Indonesia
  • AsiaOL BioFuels Corp., Philippines
  • Electricity Authority, New Zealand
  • ICICI Bank Limited - India
  • Noble Europe Ltd - UK
  • Vedanta Resources Plc - India
  • Economic Council, Georgia
  • Chamber of Mines of South Africa
  • SN Aboitiz Power Inc, Philippines
  • Ceylon Electricity Board - Sri Lanka
  • Permata Bank - Indonesia
  • Marubeni Corporation - India
  • Ernst & Young Pvt. Ltd.
  • GNFC Limited - India
  • The Treasury - Australian Government
  • Baramulti Group, Indonesia
  • Karaikal Port Pvt Ltd - India
  • PetroVietnam Power Coal Import and Supply Company
  • Mjunction Services Limited - India
  • Filglen & Citicon Mining (HK) Ltd - Hong Kong
  • Bangkok Bank PCL
  • Inspectorate - India
  • Price Waterhouse Coopers - Russia
  • MEC Coal - Indonesia
  • Freeport Indonesia
  • Eastern Energy - Thailand
  • UOB Asia (HK) Ltd
  • Chettinad Cement Corporation Ltd - India
  • Ministry of Mines - Canada
  • Arch Coal - USA
  • Indorama - Singapore
  • Kapuas Tunggal Persada - Indonesia
  • Sinarmas Energy and Mining - Indonesia
  • JPMorgan - India
  • Indogreen Group - Indonesia
  • Malabar Cements Ltd - India
  • Directorate General of MIneral and Coal - Indonesia
  • Banpu Public Company Limited - Thailand
  • Xindia Steels Limited - India
  • Deutsche Bank - India
  • APGENCO India
  • Bukit Asam (Persero) Tbk - Indonesia
  • Sical Logistics Limited - India
  • TNPL - India
  • Videocon Industries ltd - India
  • Argus Media - Singapore
  • BRS Brokers - Singapore
  • Surastha Cement
  • Parliament of New Zealand
  • Thiess Contractors Indonesia
  • Merrill Lynch Bank
  • Vitol - Bahrain
  • Adaro Indonesia
  • Maybank - Singapore
  • Salva Resources Pvt Ltd - India
  • Asia Cement - Taiwan
  • Maheswari Brothers Coal Limited - India
  • Australian Commodity Traders Exchange
  • Idemitsu - Japan
  • CIMB Investment Bank - Malaysia
  • IBC Asia (S) Pte Ltd
  • Japan Coal Energy Center
  • Kohat Cement Company Ltd. - Pakistan
  • The State Trading Corporation of India Ltd
  • Iligan Light & Power Inc, Philippines
  • VISA Power Limited - India
  • IMC Shipping - Singapore
  • WorleyParsons
  • Independent Power Producers Association of India
  • Thai Mozambique Logistica
  • White Energy Company Limited
  • Aditya Birla Group - India
  • Posco Energy - South Korea
  • Asia Pacific Energy Resources Ventures Inc, Philippines
  • Larsen & Toubro Limited - India
  • SRK Consulting
  • ACC Limited - India
  • Wood Mackenzie - Singapore
  • globalCOAL - UK
  • Indo Tambangraya Megah - Indonesia
  • Kumho Petrochemical, South Korea
  • Sindya Power Generating Company Private Ltd
  • Madhucon Powers Ltd - India
  • Holcim Trading Pte Ltd - Singapore
  • Thermax Limited - India
  • Savvy Resources Ltd - HongKong
  • KPMG - USA
  • Ministry of Finance - Indonesia
  • Semirara Mining Corp, Philippines
  • ASAPP Information Group - India
  • OPG Power Generation Pvt Ltd - India
  • Mitra SK Pvt Ltd - India
  • Jaiprakash Power Ventures ltd
  • Minerals Council of Australia
  • Heidelberg Cement - Germany
  • Inco-Indonesia
  • Enel Italy
  • Barclays Capital - USA
  • Energy Development Corp, Philippines
  • Attock Cement Pakistan Limited
  • London Commodity Brokers - England
  • Britmindo - Indonesia
  • Arutmin Indonesia
  • Ambuja Cements Ltd - India
  • Thailand Anthracite
  • Pinang Coal Indonesia
  • Asmin Koalindo Tuhup - Indonesia
  • Kalimantan Lumbung Energi - Indonesia
  • Neyveli Lignite Corporation Ltd, - India
  • Gujarat Electricity Regulatory Commission - India
  • KPCL - India
  • SGS (Thailand) Limited
  • Grasim Industreis Ltd - India
  • International Coal Ventures Pvt Ltd - India
  • Edison Trading Spa - Italy
  • HSBC - Hong Kong
  • Orica Mining Services - Indonesia
  • Vizag Seaport Private Limited - India
  • U S Energy Resources
  • TANGEDCO India
  • DBS Bank - Singapore
  • McConnell Dowell - Australia
  • Mintek Dendrill Indonesia
  • TGV SRAAC LIMITED, India
  • CoalTek, United States
  • Bhoruka Overseas - Indonesia
  • Merrill Lynch Commodities Europe
  • Thriveni
  • Platts
  • Georgia Ports Authority, United States
  • CNBM International Corporation - China
  • Australian Coal Association