Coal, Australian thermal coal Monthly Price - Pakistan Rupee per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2001 - Jan 2019: 11,635.330 (568.87%)
Chart

Description: Coal (Australia), thermal GAR, f.o.b. piers, Newcastle/Port Kembla from 2002 onwards , 6,300 kcal/kg (11,340 btu/lb), less than 0.8%, sulfur 13% ash; previously 6,667 kcal/kg (12,000 btu/lb), less than 1.0% sulfur, 14% ash

Unit: Pakistan Rupee per Metric Ton



Source: International Coal Report; Coal Week International; Coal Week; Bloomberg; IHS McCloskey Coal Report; World Bank.

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Australian thermal coal is a steam coal used primarily for electricity generation and industrial heat. On commodity markets, it is commonly priced as FOB Newcastle thermal coal, a benchmark for export-quality material loaded at the port of Newcastle in New South Wales. The standard specification is high-energy coal, often quoted around 12,000 Btu per pound with low sulfur and moderate ash content, which makes it suitable for power stations designed for imported thermal coal. Prices are typically quoted in US dollars per metric ton.

This grade is distinct from metallurgical coal, which is used in steelmaking. Thermal coal is burned in boilers to produce steam, and its value depends on calorific content, sulfur and ash levels, moisture, and transport costs from mine to port. Australian supply is important because the country has long-standing export infrastructure, deep coal basins, and access to Asian seaborne markets. The benchmark reflects the economics of the export trade rather than domestic utility coal pricing.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by geology, mining method, transport links, and weather exposure. Australian thermal coal production is concentrated in the eastern coal basins, where thick, relatively accessible seams support large-scale open-cut and underground mining. The quality of the coal varies by seam, so blending is often used to meet export specifications for energy content, ash, and sulfur. Mining output depends on stripping ratios, labor availability, equipment utilization, and the cost of moving coal from pit to rail to port.

Infrastructure is a central constraint. Coal must move through rail corridors and export terminals before it reaches seaborne buyers, so congestion, maintenance, and port scheduling affect available supply. Heavy rain, flooding, and cyclones can interrupt mining and logistics, especially in eastern Australia, where weather can damage rail lines and loading facilities. Production also responds to depletion and mine sequencing: as pits deepen or seams thin, costs rise and output can shift between mines or basins. Because mine development and expansion require long lead times, supply adjusts more slowly than spot demand.

Demand Drivers

Demand is driven mainly by electricity generation in Asia, especially in countries that rely on imported thermal coal for baseload power. Coal-fired power plants value high calorific content and predictable combustion characteristics, so Australian coal is often favored where boilers are designed for imported grades. Demand is also influenced by industrial heat users, including cement and other energy-intensive industries, though power generation remains the dominant use.

Substitution is important. Buyers can switch among thermal coal origins based on delivered cost, coal quality, freight rates, and plant design. In some systems, coal competes with natural gas, hydroelectricity, nuclear power, and renewables, but the degree of substitution depends on infrastructure and policy. Seasonal demand patterns often reflect electricity load, with higher consumption during periods of extreme heat or cold. Long-run demand is shaped by urbanization, industrialization, and the pace at which power systems replace coal-fired generation with alternative fuels and technologies.

Macro and Financial Drivers

As a globally traded fuel, Australian thermal coal is sensitive to the US dollar because benchmark pricing is denominated in dollars while many buyers and producers face local-currency costs. Exchange-rate movements can change import affordability and producer margins. Freight rates, port congestion, and shipping availability also matter because delivered cost is a major part of the buyer’s decision.

Coal is a physical commodity with storage costs, so nearby and deferred prices can differ depending on inventory conditions and transport constraints. When prompt supply is tight, nearby contracts can trade at a premium; when inventories are ample, the forward curve can reflect carrying costs. Broader industrial activity, power demand, and fuel-switching economics influence coal alongside other energy commodities, especially natural gas and oil-linked fuels. Inflation and interest rates affect mining costs, capital spending, and the financing of inventories and infrastructure.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 20012,045.33-
May 20012,077.041.55%
Jun 20012,151.133.57%
Jul 20012,161.360.48%
Aug 20012,169.350.37%
Sep 20012,105.69-2.93%
Oct 20012,029.56-3.62%
Nov 20011,809.09-10.86%
Dec 20011,664.63-7.99%
Jan 20021,660.66-0.24%
Feb 20021,691.591.86%
Mar 20021,671.81-1.17%
Apr 20021,628.64-2.58%
May 20021,616.02-0.77%
Jun 20021,497.34-7.34%
Jul 20021,388.25-7.29%
Aug 20021,325.20-4.54%
Sep 20021,346.071.57%
Oct 20021,450.067.73%
Nov 20021,438.61-0.79%
Dec 20021,434.08-0.31%
Jan 20031,451.131.19%
Feb 20031,460.680.66%
Mar 20031,412.35-3.31%
Apr 20031,355.26-4.04%
May 20031,345.14-0.75%
Jun 20031,391.123.42%
Jul 20031,406.411.10%
Aug 20031,463.734.08%
Sep 20031,542.925.41%
Oct 20031,585.042.73%
Nov 20031,714.938.19%
Dec 20031,945.3113.43%
Jan 20042,167.4211.42%
Feb 20042,395.9810.55%
Mar 20042,811.1117.33%
Apr 20043,059.928.85%
May 20043,253.176.32%
Jun 20043,448.065.99%
Jul 20043,574.833.68%
Aug 20043,467.08-3.01%
Sep 20043,266.07-5.80%
Oct 20043,353.122.67%
Nov 20043,137.88-6.42%
Dec 20043,109.12-0.92%
Jan 20053,136.530.88%
Feb 20052,950.29-5.94%
Mar 20053,011.192.06%
Apr 20053,030.110.63%
May 20053,052.700.75%
Jun 20053,044.05-0.28%
Jul 20053,035.90-0.27%
Aug 20052,931.56-3.44%
Sep 20052,708.04-7.62%
Oct 20052,535.78-6.36%
Nov 20052,275.29-10.27%
Dec 20052,287.380.53%
Jan 20062,584.9013.01%
Feb 20062,856.1810.49%
Mar 20062,985.014.51%
Apr 20063,172.006.26%
May 20063,159.52-0.39%
Jun 20063,152.52-0.22%
Jul 20063,180.220.88%
Aug 20063,073.06-3.37%
Sep 20062,848.99-7.29%
Oct 20062,668.83-6.32%
Nov 20062,792.654.64%
Dec 20063,029.348.48%
Jan 20073,123.553.11%
Feb 20073,215.382.94%
Mar 20073,361.914.56%
Apr 20073,408.161.38%
May 20073,397.14-0.32%
Jun 20073,735.969.97%
Jul 20074,067.198.87%
Aug 20074,195.193.15%
Sep 20074,149.22-1.10%
Oct 20074,539.879.42%
Nov 20075,158.8613.63%
Dec 20075,571.087.99%
Jan 20085,617.000.82%
Feb 20088,081.1343.87%
Mar 20087,252.96-10.25%
Apr 20087,839.628.09%
May 20089,031.5815.20%
Jun 200810,761.7519.16%
Jul 200812,753.0318.50%
Aug 200811,809.67-7.40%
Sep 200811,600.82-1.77%
Oct 20088,676.61-25.21%
Nov 20087,380.23-14.94%
Dec 20086,220.21-15.72%
Jan 20096,293.131.17%
Feb 20095,999.60-4.66%
Mar 20094,904.46-18.25%
Apr 20095,119.064.38%
May 20095,203.141.64%
Jun 20095,789.9411.28%
Jul 20096,070.624.85%
Aug 20096,010.41-0.99%
Sep 20095,610.49-6.65%
Oct 20095,920.475.53%
Nov 20096,584.5811.22%
Dec 20096,991.246.18%
Jan 20108,210.3417.44%
Feb 20108,004.21-2.51%
Mar 20107,970.74-0.42%
Apr 20108,411.565.53%
May 20108,448.950.44%
Jun 20108,382.19-0.79%
Jul 20108,215.57-1.99%
Aug 20107,692.10-6.37%
Sep 20108,148.145.93%
Oct 20108,381.842.87%
Nov 20109,173.109.44%
Dec 201010,146.5610.61%
Jan 201111,361.0511.97%
Feb 201110,959.99-3.53%
Mar 201110,771.56-1.72%
Apr 201110,373.80-3.69%
May 201110,151.73-2.14%
Jun 201110,309.501.55%
Jul 201110,395.880.84%
Aug 201110,414.040.17%
Sep 201110,772.913.45%
Oct 201110,380.06-3.65%
Nov 20119,893.00-4.69%
Dec 20119,974.710.83%
Jan 201210,515.865.43%
Feb 201210,618.800.98%
Mar 20129,758.29-8.10%
Apr 20129,397.93-3.69%
May 20128,744.77-6.95%
Jun 20128,219.88-6.00%
Jul 20128,335.521.41%
Aug 20128,602.793.21%
Sep 20128,419.80-2.13%
Oct 20127,810.57-7.24%
Nov 20128,251.815.65%
Dec 20129,035.749.50%
Jan 20139,050.710.17%
Feb 20139,307.872.84%
Mar 20138,929.44-4.07%
Apr 20138,634.82-3.30%
May 20138,635.930.01%
Jun 20138,165.67-5.45%
Jul 20137,780.34-4.72%
Aug 20137,934.351.98%
Sep 20138,185.563.17%
Oct 20138,444.543.16%
Nov 20138,846.094.76%
Dec 20139,033.482.12%
Jan 20148,610.09-4.69%
Feb 20148,023.94-6.81%
Mar 20147,324.79-8.71%
Apr 20147,113.17-2.89%
May 20147,275.352.28%
Jun 20147,046.63-3.14%
Jul 20146,791.48-3.62%
Aug 20146,918.551.87%
Sep 20146,761.55-2.27%
Oct 20146,556.45-3.03%
Nov 20146,376.45-2.75%
Dec 20146,303.58-1.14%
Jan 20156,196.10-1.70%
Feb 20157,010.5513.14%
Mar 20156,597.19-5.90%
Apr 20155,723.90-13.24%
May 20156,233.858.91%
Jun 20156,004.26-3.68%
Jul 20156,096.551.54%
Aug 20156,059.11-0.61%
Sep 20156,016.59-0.70%
Oct 20155,676.20-5.66%
Nov 20155,535.76-2.47%
Dec 20155,471.16-1.17%
Jan 20165,143.92-5.98%
Feb 20165,264.332.34%
Mar 20165,468.483.88%
Apr 20165,310.30-2.89%
May 20165,375.661.23%
Jun 20165,532.432.92%
Jul 20166,421.2216.07%
Aug 20167,058.269.92%
Sep 20167,610.807.83%
Oct 20169,865.6629.63%
Nov 201610,840.529.88%
Dec 20169,241.50-14.75%
Jan 20178,779.34-5.00%
Feb 20178,384.65-4.50%
Mar 20178,482.761.17%
Apr 20178,771.123.40%
May 20177,803.05-11.04%
Jun 20178,504.718.99%
Jul 20179,240.638.65%
Aug 201710,389.9912.44%
Sep 201710,311.40-0.76%
Oct 201710,238.07-0.71%
Nov 201710,190.45-0.47%
Dec 201710,994.477.89%
Jan 201811,768.117.04%
Feb 201811,713.86-0.46%
Mar 201810,839.51-7.46%
Apr 201810,830.93-0.08%
May 201812,173.1012.39%
Jun 201813,653.3512.16%
Jul 201814,951.099.50%
Aug 201814,559.46-2.62%
Sep 201814,184.22-2.58%
Oct 201814,263.880.56%
Nov 201813,487.95-5.44%
Dec 201814,060.864.25%
Jan 201913,680.67-2.70%

Top Companies

Coal India Limited
Website: http://coalindia.nic.in/
Location: Kolkata, India
Estimated Production: 361 million tonnes per year

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