Coal prices jump to highest in over a year on Middle East war


COAL prices jumped to the highest level since November 2024 as continuing military strikes in the Middle East pushed countries around the world to consider switching away from oil and gas stuck in the region.

Newcastle coal futures, the Asian benchmark, soared as much as 9.3% to $150 a ton on Monday. That came alongside a surge in crude oil prices to almost $120 a barrel as Gulf producers cut production. 

An Iranian drone attack last week forced Qatar to halt the biggest LNG export facility in the world, which accounts for about 20% of global supply. That’s prompted buyers to look for alternatives, with some importers like Taiwan weighing ramping up the use of coal power plants if the outage proves lengthy.

Gas prices have climbed as well. European natural gas surged as much as 30% on Monday while Asian spot prices have doubled over the past week and remain elevated. - Bloomberg

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Business News

Mudajaya wins appeal in fund misappropriation case
UOA Development terminates agreement for Komune Care Centre
MRCB completes RM1.58bil Bukit Jalil Sentral property acquisition
Genting unit launches US$1.5bil note buyback to refinance debt
ES Sunlogy’s secures LOA valued at RM107.5mil
Lotte Chemical Titan inks RM103.7mil naphtha deal with Indonesian unit amid supply risks
UOB facilitates over RM18bil FDI into JS-SEZ since 2024
Ringgit ends marginally lower vs US dollar
iCents launches Maytech cleanroom unit with RM15mil investment
A1 acquires land in Selangor for RM17mil to set up regional office

Others Also Read