London, 29 August (Argus) — UK coal imports rose by 7pc in the second quarter, compared with a year earlier, as domestic production continued to decline, according to data from the Department of Energy and Climate Change.
Domestic coal production fell by 7.34pc, compared with a year earlier, in the first three months of the year, but the decline steepened in the second quarter with a drop of 24.3pc, compared with a year earlier, to 3.6mn t.
Deep mine production fell particularly sharply in the second quarter, down by 43.2pc, compared with a year earlier, to 1.1mn t. This was mainly a result of the mothballing of the Maltby Colliery at the start of 2013 and the closure of the Daw Mill colliery following a fire in February 2013.
Surface mine production fell from 2.4mnt in the first quarter to 2.3mn t in the second quarter, a drop of 8.3pc compared with a year earlier. This differs considerably from 2012, when first-quarter output only fell by 2.2pc, compared with a year earlier.
UK coal production declined by 16.9% during the first half of the year, compared with a year earlier, from 8.94mn t to 7.44mn t. The main reason was the drop in deep mine production, rather than surface mining. Meanwhile, net imports rose by 11.6pc to 24.49mn t in the first half, compared with 21.94mn t a year earlier. Consumption by electricity generators has continued to decline, dropping by 7.7pc in the second quarter to just 11mn t. Shrinking demand was reflected in lower coal stocks, which totalled 13.2mnt at the end of June, down from 14.3mn t a year earlier.
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