UPDATE: Major Miners Back Australia's Wiggins Island Coal Terminal
30 September 2010 - 4:28PM
Dow Jones News
Plans to unblock an infrastructure bottleneck limiting coal
exports from the Bowen and Surat Basins in Australia's Queensland
state took a significant step forward Thursday, after eight miners
agreed to ship 27 million tons a year through the Wiggins Island
Coal Export Terminal.
Australia accounts for around two-thirds of global exports of
the coking coal used in steelmaking, the vast majority of it coming
from the Bowen Basin through the ports of Gladstone and Mackay. But
the country's major coal export terminals have been hampered in
recent years by infrastructure that is incapable of processing the
volumes of commodities demanded by overseas consumers.
WICET, a consortium of 16 miners operating in the region, said
agreement will allow it to arrange financing for the A$5 billion
development, which is expected to be finalized by the end of April
2011 and start exports in 2014.
The eight miners include Xstrata PLC's (XTA.LN) Xstrata Coal
subsidiary, Yanzhou Coal Mining Co. Ltd.'s (YZC) Yancoal,
Wesfarmers Ltd.'s (WES.AU) Wesfarmers Curragh, Aquila Resources
Ltd. (AQA.AU) and Cockatoo Coal Ltd. (COK.AU). Bandanna Energy Ltd.
(BND.AU), Caledon Resources PLC (CDN.LN) and Northern Energy Corp.
Ltd. (NEC.AU) will also be involved in stage one of the
development.
Bandanna said that it had posted a bond of A$3.1 million to
guarantee its commitment to transport coal through the port and
commit an estimated A$5.9 million to the project's development
costs.
An analyst at a European bank in Sydney, who asked not to be
named, said that ports were a crucial link in the export chain
because of the long time they took to start up.
"Ports you have a lead time of five years from the first plan
through to production, (rail tracks) take about three years and
above rail (rolling stock) takes about two years," he said.
However, he stressed that the larger concern around the port of
Gladstone was rail rather than port capacity, and that Asian demand
is growing so fast that even improvements to Queensland's
infrastructure and the start of major exports from Mozambique would
be unable to keep pace.
Gladstone currently handles around 50 million tons of coal a
year and has capacity to transport a further 25 million tons, but
shipping queues are common.
On Thursday, nine vessels were anchored outside the port
compared to six at loading berths, according to data on the
Gladstone Port Corp.'s website.
WICET's plan for exports through the port could extend by up to
80 million tons a year if stages two and three of the project go
ahead after the first stage is completed in 2014.
Other members of the 16-member Wiggins Island consortium include
BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP), Rio Tinto PLC (RTP) and Macarthur Coal
Ltd. (MCC.AU).
"How big those stages two and three will be depends on
expressions of interest" from miners involved in the consortium,
said a spokesman for WICET.
Those expressions were lodged by the end of August and are
currently being assessed.
-By David Fickling, Dow Jones Newswires; +61 2 8272 4689;
david.fickling@dowjones.com
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