Coal, South African export price Monthly Price - Rial Omani per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2006 - Mar 2026: 14.980 (70.99%)
Chart

Description: Coal (South Africa), thermal NAR netback assessment f.o.b. Richards Bay 6,000 kcal/kg from February 13, 2017; during 2006-February 10, 2017 thermal NAR; during 2002-2005 6,200 kcal/kg (11,200 btu/lb), less than 1.0%, sulfur 16% ash; years 1990-2001 6390 kcal/kg (11,500 btu/lb)

Unit: Rial Omani per Metric Ton



Source: Bloomberg; International Coal Report; Coal Week International; Coal Week; 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

South African export coal is typically priced as a seaborne thermal coal benchmark quoted in US dollars per metric ton, commonly on a free on board basis at Richards Bay. The benchmark reflects coal loaded for export from South Africa’s principal coal-exporting terminal and is used as a reference for international trade in thermal coal. Coal is a solid fossil fuel formed from ancient plant material and is traded by grade, calorific value, ash content, sulfur content, and moisture, all of which affect its suitability for power generation and industrial use.

In commodity markets, South African export coal serves as a reference point for Atlantic and Asian thermal coal pricing because it is a widely traded export grade with established logistics. The price is usually discussed in terms of delivered energy content as well as tonnage, since buyers compare coal on a heat-adjusted basis. Its main uses are electricity generation, industrial heat, cement production, and, in some regions, metallurgical blending where thermal coal characteristics are acceptable.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by geology, mining costs, rail capacity, port throughput, and the quality of the coal seam. South Africa’s export coal comes mainly from the coalfields of Mpumalanga and nearby regions, where large sedimentary deposits support both domestic power supply and export production. The structure of the industry links mine output to transport infrastructure: coal must move by rail to Richards Bay, so bottlenecks in rail performance can constrain exports even when mine output is available.

Production is also affected by the physical characteristics of the coal seam. Strip ratios, seam thickness, ash content, and beneficiation requirements influence the cost of preparing export-grade material. Because coal mining is capital intensive and mine life depends on depletion of accessible reserves, supply responds slowly to price changes. Weather can disrupt open-pit operations, rail corridors, and port loading, while flooding or drought can affect mine operations and dust control. Labor relations, maintenance cycles, and equipment availability also matter because export coal depends on continuous movement through a linked mining-and-logistics chain.

Demand Drivers

Demand is driven primarily by electricity generation, especially in countries that rely on imported thermal coal for baseload power. South African export coal competes with coal from other exporting regions on the basis of energy content, sulfur, ash, and delivered cost. It also competes indirectly with natural gas, fuel oil, hydroelectricity, nuclear power, and renewable generation, depending on the importing country’s power system and fuel-switching capability.

Industrial demand comes from cement, steel-related heat applications, and other high-temperature processes that require solid fuel. Seasonal patterns matter because power demand often rises during hot or cold periods, increasing coal burn in systems that use coal for dispatchable generation. Long-run demand is shaped by the installed fleet of coal-fired power plants, the pace of industrialization in importing economies, and the availability of substitute fuels. Environmental regulation can alter the fuel mix by changing emissions costs, but the basic demand mechanism remains the same: coal is purchased where it offers reliable, storable, and comparatively low-cost thermal energy.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Because South African export coal is priced in US dollars, exchange-rate movements affect local producer revenues and the relative cost for non-dollar buyers. Broader industrial activity influences demand because coal consumption is tied to power generation and heavy industry. Interest rates matter indirectly through their effect on inventory financing, mine investment, and the cost of holding physical stocks.

Storage and transport costs shape the forward curve. Coal is bulky and expensive to store and move, so nearby delivery periods can trade differently from later periods when inventories are tight or logistics are constrained. Like other energy commodities, coal prices often respond to changes in freight rates, port congestion, and the cost of substituting between fuels. Correlation with other asset classes is usually secondary to physical market fundamentals, but the dollar and global growth conditions remain important transmission channels.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 200621.10-
May 200619.38-8.16%
Jun 200620.143.93%
Jul 200619.87-1.34%
Aug 200620.613.70%
Sep 200618.74-9.03%
Oct 200618.920.94%
Nov 200618.53-2.05%
Dec 200619.495.17%
Jan 200719.28-1.09%
Feb 200719.862.99%
Mar 200720.563.56%
Apr 200719.75-3.96%
May 200719.32-2.16%
Jun 200721.8313.00%
Jul 200722.322.25%
Aug 200723.143.65%
Sep 200724.154.37%
Oct 200728.1116.41%
Nov 200734.5122.74%
Dec 200736.245.01%
Jan 200838.696.76%
Feb 200844.2214.29%
Mar 200842.68-3.48%
Apr 200841.81-2.03%
May 200846.4110.99%
Jun 200854.7517.96%
Jul 200864.5017.82%
Aug 200860.33-6.47%
Sep 200856.81-5.83%
Oct 200842.18-25.75%
Nov 200834.37-18.52%
Dec 200829.70-13.57%
Jan 200929.38-1.10%
Feb 200926.55-9.61%
Mar 200922.52-15.20%
Apr 200924.187.38%
May 200922.31-7.71%
Jun 200923.153.74%
Jul 200923.491.50%
Aug 200924.705.16%
Sep 200923.50-4.86%
Oct 200924.745.27%
Nov 200925.553.25%
Dec 200928.3811.08%
Jan 201033.4317.80%
Feb 201032.05-4.12%
Mar 201031.90-0.48%
Apr 201034.116.92%
May 201034.972.53%
Jun 201035.692.06%
Jul 201034.84-2.37%
Aug 201033.80-2.99%
Sep 201033.00-2.37%
Oct 201034.996.02%
Nov 201039.6813.42%
Dec 201044.3111.67%
Jan 201147.156.40%
Feb 201145.27-3.98%
Mar 201146.522.77%
Apr 201147.692.50%
May 201146.32-2.88%
Jun 201145.76-1.20%
Jul 201144.71-2.30%
Aug 201145.471.72%
Sep 201144.46-2.24%
Oct 201142.63-4.10%
Nov 201140.55-4.88%
Dec 201140.06-1.21%
Jan 201240.861.99%
Feb 201240.49-0.90%
Mar 201239.77-1.78%
Apr 201238.96-2.03%
May 201236.05-7.46%
Jun 201232.80-9.02%
Jul 201233.582.37%
Aug 201234.262.04%
Sep 201233.00-3.69%
Oct 201231.84-3.52%
Nov 201232.973.55%
Dec 201234.163.62%
Jan 201333.12-3.05%
Feb 201332.73-1.16%
Mar 201331.83-2.77%
Apr 201331.54-0.91%
May 201331.45-0.28%
Jun 201329.72-5.50%
Jul 201327.93-6.02%
Aug 201328.030.37%
Sep 201328.110.26%
Oct 201331.0110.33%
Nov 201332.233.93%
Dec 201332.540.95%
Jan 201431.88-2.03%
Feb 201429.84-6.39%
Mar 201428.68-3.87%
Apr 201428.860.62%
May 201429.140.96%
Jun 201428.49-2.23%
Jul 201427.47-3.58%
Aug 201427.37-0.35%
Sep 201426.09-4.68%
Oct 201425.28-3.12%
Nov 201425.25-0.12%
Dec 201425.430.73%
Jan 201522.80-10.36%
Feb 201524.417.07%
Mar 201523.04-5.61%
Apr 201522.67-1.62%
May 201523.704.55%
Jun 201523.34-1.49%
Jul 201522.26-4.63%
Aug 201521.16-4.97%
Sep 201519.76-6.62%
Oct 201519.27-2.47%
Nov 201520.516.45%
Dec 201518.75-8.57%
Jan 201618.880.66%
Feb 201619.352.53%
Mar 201620.214.45%
Apr 201620.13-0.42%
May 201620.863.61%
Jun 201622.538.02%
Jul 201623.996.49%
Aug 201625.516.33%
Sep 201626.273.00%
Oct 201632.2222.63%
Nov 201634.286.40%
Dec 201630.83-10.05%
Jan 201733.267.86%
Feb 201732.14-3.34%
Mar 201730.42-5.37%
Apr 201730.33-0.28%
May 201728.61-5.68%
Jun 201730.456.44%
Jul 201731.413.14%
Aug 201733.777.53%
Sep 201735.475.03%
Oct 201735.15-0.90%
Nov 201735.14-0.04%
Dec 201736.714.48%
Jan 201837.482.09%
Feb 201835.64-4.92%
Mar 201834.41-3.43%
Apr 201835.503.15%
May 201839.1810.37%
Jun 201839.941.95%
Jul 201840.762.06%
Aug 201837.87-7.11%
Sep 201839.273.72%
Oct 201838.58-1.76%
Nov 201835.21-8.73%
Dec 201836.694.18%
Jan 201935.10-4.32%
Feb 201932.36-7.81%
Mar 201930.30-6.36%
Apr 201927.87-8.02%
May 201926.50-4.91%
Jun 201924.20-8.69%
Jul 201925.304.53%
Aug 201923.24-8.15%
Sep 201923.601.56%
Oct 201925.939.89%
Nov 201928.319.16%
Dec 201929.233.27%
Jan 202031.567.97%
Feb 202030.76-2.56%
Mar 202026.10-15.13%
Apr 202021.76-16.66%
May 202022.081.48%
Jun 202021.84-1.06%
Jul 202021.76-0.37%
Aug 202022.061.38%
Sep 202022.100.16%
Oct 202023.476.21%
Nov 202026.7013.75%
Dec 202032.7522.68%
Jan 202133.391.96%
Feb 202131.82-4.71%
Mar 202134.869.55%
Apr 202134.27-1.69%
May 202138.1811.42%
Jun 202143.4213.70%
Jul 202147.048.33%
Aug 202153.0312.74%
Sep 202156.165.89%
Oct 202176.7736.70%
Nov 202149.22-35.89%
Dec 202154.7911.33%
Jan 202264.7918.25%
Feb 202275.5216.56%
Mar 2022113.2049.91%
Apr 2022116.122.57%
May 2022107.66-7.28%
Jun 2022112.034.06%
Jul 2022103.47-7.64%
Aug 2022105.592.06%
Sep 202290.35-14.43%
Oct 202273.52-18.62%
Nov 202265.02-11.57%
Dec 202282.6727.14%
Jan 202366.13-20.00%
Feb 202355.63-15.89%
Mar 202352.61-5.41%
Apr 202351.43-2.26%
May 202339.60-22.99%
Jun 202337.90-4.29%
Jul 202337.20-1.86%
Aug 202337.530.88%
Sep 202338.392.31%
Oct 202349.3728.59%
Nov 202341.91-15.11%
Dec 202341.85-0.16%
Jan 202441.05-1.91%
Feb 202440.45-1.46%
Mar 202440.31-0.33%
Apr 202440.330.05%
May 202440.610.71%
Jun 202440.49-0.31%
Jul 202440.490.01%
Aug 202440.840.85%
Sep 202440.78-0.13%
Oct 202441.070.70%
Nov 202441.070.01%
Dec 202440.55-1.26%
Jan 202539.71-2.08%
Feb 202538.61-2.78%
Mar 202537.68-2.41%
Apr 202536.74-2.48%
May 202536.27-1.29%
Jun 202536.06-0.58%
Jul 202536.00-0.15%
Aug 202535.87-0.37%
Sep 202535.48-1.09%
Oct 202535.21-0.75%
Nov 202535.20-0.03%
Dec 202534.94-0.73%
Jan 202634.82-0.35%
Feb 202635.070.72%
Mar 202636.082.88%

Top Companies

BHP Billiton Energy Coal South Africa
Website: http://www.bhpbilliton.com/
Location: Johannesburg, South Africa
Estimated Production: 48 million tonnes per year

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