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Capacity crunch crimps Australia's war-time commodity bonanza

Published 10/03/2022, 06:54 pm
Updated 10/03/2022, 06:57 pm
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Worker Damien Smith holds wheat grains as he assists with loading a train at the town of Mallala, located north of Adelaide, South Australia, August 20, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray

By Sonali Paul and Praveen Menon

MELBOURNE/WELLINGTON (Reuters) - Phones are ringing off the hook in Australia as buyers hunt for supplies of coal, gas and wheat to replace cargoes from Russia and war-torn Ukraine, but local producers are being hampered by infrastructural and labour constraints.

With shipping disrupted out of the Black Sea and U.S. sanctions on Russian oil as well as sanctions on Russian banks hitting trade finance, supply shortages are looming for coal, liquefied natural gas (LNG) globally.

Wheat, coal and LNG prices have soared to record highs as Russia and Ukraine together account for about 30% of the world's wheat trade, while Russia is the world's third-largest exporter of coal used in power generation, and fourth-largest exporter of LNG.

Australian commodity exporters eye up profitable trade potential as global prices spike https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/lbvgnzyympq/AustraliavsWorldCommodityPrices.png

In wheat, as the world's sixth largest exporter, Australia is set to ship a record 25.3 million tonnes this year, but trucking, rail, port and staffing constraints mean it won't be able to fill supply gaps at least in the near term.

All the shipping slots are booked up for the next few months on the east and west coast, following a second straight year of a record wheat crop, which has kept a lid on Australian wheat prices compared to the Chicago Board of Trade prices.

"We simply can't get as much out of the country in time to benefit from the global prices at the moment," said Rabobank agricultural analyst Dennis Voznesenski.

He said Asian buyers who typically only place orders a month or two in advance are already tapping Australia merchants for grain in June and July, when they would typically rely on supplies from the Black Sea.

"Everyone's pretty much scrambling now," said Graeme Cooney, founder of Mobile Conveying Services, which operates mobile ship loaders for the grains and coal industries.

His company is facing calls from wheat growers and coal miners who need loaders to get their products to port and onto ships as fast as possible, but there is a shortage of equipment to do the job.

Amid a global shipping crunch, the lead times for acquiring loaders from overseas has blown out to 12 or 13 months.

"So, yes, there is a bottleneck now," Cooney said.

Trucking company Riordan Grains said even if it were to buy more trucks to handle the bumper crop, there are no drivers available.

"We all know that unemployment is at record lows, so trying to find additional people to do additional work in Australia, even if we had more ports, is pretty much impossible," Managing Director Jim Riordan said.

CONTRACTS BOOKED

Coal producers, too, have been bombarded with calls for supply over the past two weeks from countries like Poland which have been reliant on Russian supply.

"New Hope Group's high quality coals are in high demand in existing markets, however, we are examining opportunities to supply European markets," a New Hope Corp spokesperson said.

Australia export volumes & value of coal, LNG, wheat and nickel https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/zdvxokggdpx/AuscoalLNgnickelWheatExports.png

However Australia's coal and LNG producers sell most of their volumes in term contracts, so cannot divert supplies from those customers.

"Australian miners are running flat out. We should see a slight uptick in coal production and exports once the wet weather up and down the east coast of Australia subsides," said Barrenjoey analyst Glyn Lawcock.

While they won't be able to hike output, coal producers will be able to reap the benefits of soaring prices.

In its December quarterly outlook, ahead of the Ukraine conflict, the government forecast Australia's thermal coal exports would rise to 208 million tonnes in the year to June 2022 from 192 million tonnes a year earlier, but the value would more than double to A$35 billion ($26 billion).

For LNG producers, there is no extra gas available to be able to boost output. In fact, LNG exports are expected to be flat or lower versus last year's record 80.6 million tonnes, which ranked Australia as the world's largest LNG exporter.

Production at the country's two oldest LNG projects, North West Shelf LNG and Darwin LNG, is falling as their founding gas fields dry up.

At the same time, the Prelude floating LNG plant, run by Shell (LON:RDSa), is off line, following a massive power failure in December, and the company has not given a time frame for restarting the 3.6 million tonnes a year facility.

Woodside Petroleum (ASX:WPL), operator of two of Australia's LNG plants, said it expects most of its uncommitted cargoes to be sold in Asia, as the Asia-Pacific market is short of product.

Thanks to soaring oil-linked contract prices, the value of Australia's LNG exports in the year to June 2022 is expected to more than double to A$63 billion from the previous year, according to the government's December forecast.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Worker Damien Smith holds wheat grains as he assists with loading a train at the town of Mallala, located north of Adelaide, South Australia, August 20, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray

Value of Australian coal, LNG, wheat and nickel exports since 2005 https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/gkvlgakkmpb/AustCoalLNGWheatNickelExportssince2005.png

Nickel could be a stand out, on the back of an unprecedented surge in prices. Australia's exports are forecast to jump by 42% to 257,000 tonnes in the year to June 2022 from a year earlier, valued at A$5.2 billion.

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