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Thungela CEO expects South Africa coal to export to rebound as rail improvements.

Thungela Resources, a South African company that exports thermal coal used in power plants, expects to see a rebound in the country's fossil fuel shipments from next year, as the rail bottlenecks are eased, said CEO July Ndlovu on Monday.

In 2023, coal shipments in the country fell to their lowest level for three decades. This was due to the lack of locomotives and spare parts as well as vandalism and theft of cables.

Ndlovu stated that coal shipments may reach more than 50 millions tons annually by 2025. Transnet's railway unit transported 76.47 millions tons of fossil fuel in 2017.

Ndlovu told a press conference that "the worst is likely behind us." "The building block are in place so it makes sense that improvements will occur."

South Africa's rail shortage has curtailed coal shipments to companies such as Thungela Resources, Exxaro Resources, and Glencore. Some miners have been forced to transport the fossil fuel via road, and use alternative ports located in Mozambique.

Lack of rail capacity also hurts earnings at a time where fuel prices are falling. Thungela reported that its profits for the six-month period ending June fell 61%, to 1.2 billion Rand ($67.34million).

Ndlovu stated that if the South African rail network improved, Thungela's shipments could reach more than 12,5 million tons in 2019. Nombasa Tsengwa, Exxaro's CEO, said last week that rail crises had "bottomed-out". Reporting by Nelson Banya, Felix Njini and Conor Humphries; editing by Conor Humphries. $1 = 17.8195 Rand

(source: Reuters)