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BEIJING: China’s coal imports surged 76% in September as power plants scrambled for fuel to ease a power crunch that is pushing domestic coal prices to record highs and disrupting business activity in the world’s second-largest economy.

Flooding in a key coal producing province has worsened the supply outlook, with analysts expecting electricity shortages and rationing to continue into early next year.

China, the world’s largest coal consumer, has been grappling with a growing energy crisis brought on by shortages and record high prices for the fuel. The government has taken a range of steps to boost coal production and manage electricity demand at industrial plants, while power producers and other coal users have been ramping up imports.

On Tuesday, the government took its boldest step in a decades-long power sector reform by allowing coal-fired power plants to pass on the high costs of generation to some end-users via market-driven electricity prices, adding to worries about building global inflationary pressures.

China’s state planner said at a news briefing on Wednesday that it will secure domestic coal and energy supplies for this winter while ensuring the country’s climate change targets are met.

Daily coal output has reached the highest since February at more than 11.2 million tonnes, while average coal stocks at its power plants can support about 15 days of use, according to an official from the National Energy Administration at the same news briefing.

Official data on Wednesday showed China’s coal imports last month rose to their highest this year.

Imports totalled 32.88 million tonnes in September, up 76% from a year earlier. The monthly tally was the fifth highest on record, according to Reuters calculations.

More than half of the regions in Mainland China managed by State Grid have enforced power consumption cuts since last month.

Local governments in top Chinese coal producing areas Shanxi and Inner Mongolia have ordered some 200 mines to boost output, but incessant rain has flooded 60 mines in Shanxi. Four mines with a combined annual output capacity of 4.8 million tonnes remained shut, a Shanxi official said on Tuesday.

The most-active January Zhengzhou thermal coal futures touched a record of 1,640 yuan ($254.44) per tonne on Wednesday, having surged almost three-fold year-to-date.

The jump comes a day after Beijing announced it would allow power plants to charge commercial customers market-based prices for power, a significant break from previous policy that allowed industry to lock in fixed-price deals with suppliers.

Power-hungry industries such as steel, aluminium, cement and chemical producers are expected to face higher and more volatile power costs under the new policy, inflating their costs and pressuring profit margins.

Despite the disruptions, data on Wednesday showed China’s overall export growth unexpectedly accelerated in September as strong global demand offset power shortages and other issues.

“Although power rationing doesn’t appear to have derailed the export sector so far, there is still a risk that it could do so in the coming weeks,” Julian Evans-Pritchard, Senior China Economist at Capital Economics said in a note.

“And while officials have made clear that the focus of power rationing will be energy-intensive sectors such as metals and chemicals, the hit to output in these industries could filter through supply chains and hurt downstream exporters.”

Factories in eastern provinces of Guangdong and Zhejiang, both major export powerhouses, have been asked to stagger their production throughout the week.

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