Scott Morrison warns against concern over coal exports slowdown in China

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has urged people not to link Australian coal export processing delays to China with diplomatic tensions.

Coal is stockpiled before being loaded onto ship at Gladstone.

Minister Simon Birmingham wants an explanation for China's delays in unloading of Australian coal. (AAP)

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has warned against linking processing delays of coal exports to China with diplomatic tensions, as Australia seeks answers about the slowdown.

Coal export unloading times have almost doubled to 40 days, but the federal government has dismissed suggestions a ban has been in place a the northern port of Dalian.

Mr Morrison urged caution around how the delays were characterised, after speculation a possible ban was retaliation for Chinese telecommunications company Huawei being banned from the 5G mobile rollout.

"I think the great risk of that is it will cause needless anxiety and concern particularly in our mining and resources sector," he told reporters in Hobart on Sunday.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks to the media during a press conference at Parliament House.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison is seeking to calm concern about processing delays in coal exports. Source: AAP


He said leaping to conclusions was unhelpful and unwarranted.

"From time to time there have been decisions made in local ports," Mr Morrison said.

"We're talking about ports here which actually represent a very small portion of our coal exports to China."




Trade Minister Simon Birmingham confirmed he was seeking an explanation why processing times had blown out from about 25 to 40 days at some ports.

"There remains some issues around the timeliness of processing through ports and we're eager to understand any reasons for some of those delays," he told Sky News.

Senator Birmingham said a similar situation occurred in the final quarter of last year, but didn't have a major impact on trading of the valuable commodity.

"At the end of that quarter, when we reconciled all of the figures, Australian exports were at record levels both by volume and by value," he said.

In 2018, Australia exported 89 million tonnes of coal to China, worth $15 billion, just shy of a quarter of the country's total coal exports.

Australia's ties with China have been rocky at times since 2017 when Canberra accused China of meddling in its domestic affairs.

Tensions rose again last month after Australia rescinded the visa of a prominent Chinese businessman, just months after the Huawei ban.

Senator Birmingham said he had good relations with his Chinese counterpart.

"We don't swap text messages full of emojis but we do absolutely make sure we have professional lines of communication," the trade minister said.





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Source: AAP


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