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Thungela CEO sees South Africa coal exports rebounding as rail improves

Thungela Resources , a South African exporter of thermal coal burned in power stations, expects the nation's deliveries of the fossil fuel to rebound from next year as rail bottlenecks ease, CEO July Ndlovu said on Monday.

The country's coal shipments fell to a three-decade low of about 47 million lots each year in 2023 as state-owned ports and rail company Transnet had a hard time to move adequate volumes to ports due to lack of engines and spares, in addition to cable television theft and vandalism of infrastructure.

Coal deliveries might increase to more than 50 million loads per year from 2025, Ndlovu said. Transnet's rail system moved about 76.47 million lots of the fossil fuel in 2017.

The worst is most likely behind us, Ndlovu said on a media call. The building blocks are in location, for that reason it stands to reason that there will be improvement.

South Africa's rail crisis has suppressed coal shipments for business including Thungela, Exxaro Resources and Glencore, requiring some miners to truck the nonrenewable fuel source by roadway and to utilize alternative ports in neighboring Mozambique.

The lack of rail capability has actually also hit revenues for manufacturers at a time when prices for the fuel have softened. Thungela said its profit in the 6 months through June plunged 61% to 1.2 billion rand ($ 67.34 million).

Thungela might raise shipments from South Africa to more than 12.5 million tons next year if the rail network improves, Ndlovu stated. Exxaro CEO Nombasa Tsengwa last week that the rail crisis had bottomed out.

Thungela is weighing strategies to invest in brand-new coal production around its Ensham mine in Australia, which it acquired in 2015 and where the CEO sees additional potential given the size of the resource.

While many banks and investors are now shunning financing new coal production, Ndlovu said the company was able to fund its development projects.

If we do determine appealing chances, and we believe that they are more value accretive and boost investor returns, we need to have the ability to fund those, Ndlovu stated.

(source: Reuters)