Coal, Colombia Monthly Price - Rand per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jan 2001 - May 2018: 784.333 (299.18%)
Chart

Description: Coal (Colombia), thermal GAR, f.o.b. Bolivar, 6,450 kcal/kg, (11,200 btu/lb), less than 1.0%, sulfur 16% ash from August 2005 onwards; during years 2002-July 2005 11,600 btu/lb, less than .8% sulfur, 9% ash , 180 days forward delivery

Unit: Rand per Metric Ton



Source: 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

Colombian coal is a thermal and metallurgical fuel commodity priced in physical trade as US dollars per metric ton, commonly quoted on an FOB Puerto Bolívar basis for export cargoes. The benchmark reflects coal loaded at Colombia’s Caribbean export terminal and is used to compare delivered value against other Atlantic Basin supply sources. Colombian coal is typically traded as a seaborne bulk commodity, with quality differentiated by calorific value, sulfur content, ash, moisture, and coking characteristics. These specifications matter because coal is not a homogeneous product: power generators, industrial boilers, and steelmakers each require different grades.

Coal remains an important input for electricity generation, industrial heat, cement production, and, in some cases, steelmaking through coke and pulverized coal injection. Its market role is shaped by its substitutability with natural gas, fuel oil, and renewable electricity in power generation, while metallurgical coal competes more narrowly with other coking coals. The FOB Puerto Bolívar benchmark is especially relevant because transport from mine to port is a major part of the delivered cost structure, and export pricing depends on freight access, loading capacity, and quality consistency.

Supply Drivers

Colombian coal supply is shaped by geology, transport infrastructure, and the concentration of production in a few mining districts. The country’s export coal output is associated with large surface mines in the north, where thick seams and relatively low stripping ratios support bulk extraction. Open-pit mining generally allows lower unit costs than underground mining, but it also depends on overburden removal, equipment availability, and steady access to rail and port facilities. Because coal is bulky and low in value per ton relative to many metals, logistics are central to supply economics.

Weather and climate affect production and shipment through rainfall, flooding, and dust-control requirements, especially where mine haul roads, rail corridors, and port operations must remain continuous. Coal quality can also vary with seam geology and blending practices, so exporters manage sulfur, ash, and calorific value to meet contract specifications. Production is constrained by mine development lead times, permitting, land access, and the finite life of individual deposits. Unlike agricultural commodities, coal supply does not follow a harvest cycle, but it does respond to maintenance outages, equipment replacement, and infrastructure bottlenecks. Rail capacity and port loading efficiency are persistent determinants of export availability because inland mines depend on long-distance transport to reach the Caribbean coast.

Demand Drivers

Demand for Colombian coal is driven mainly by power generation and industrial combustion in importing regions. Thermal coal is used where utilities and industrial users require dispatchable heat at relatively low fuel cost, while metallurgical coal is used in steelmaking as a source of coke. Demand depends on the fuel mix of importing countries, the efficiency of coal-fired plants, and the availability of substitutes such as natural gas, hydroelectricity, nuclear power, and renewables. In power markets, coal often competes with gas on a heat-content and delivered-cost basis, so relative fuel prices strongly influence import demand.

Seasonal patterns can matter where electricity demand rises with heating or cooling loads, although coal’s role varies by region and generating fleet. Industrial demand is tied to cement, brick, and heavy manufacturing activity, which makes coal consumption sensitive to broad economic output. Metallurgical coal demand is linked to steel production and therefore to construction, machinery, and infrastructure cycles. Environmental regulation, emissions standards, and plant retirement schedules shape long-run coal use by changing the economics of coal-fired generation and industrial combustion. Because coal is a bulk fuel with established handling systems, demand is also influenced by port access, stockpiling practices, and the ability of buyers to switch among grades with similar calorific and sulfur profiles.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Coal prices are influenced by the US dollar because international coal trade is commonly denominated in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect local-currency costs and import affordability. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and working-capital costs, especially for traders and utilities that hold physical stocks. Storage is feasible but costly, so coal markets can exhibit contango when prompt supply is abundant and backwardation when near-term availability is tight. Freight rates are also important because delivered coal prices depend heavily on ocean transport, particularly for Atlantic Basin cargoes.

Coal often trades with a stronger link to industrial activity than to financial assets, but it can still respond to broad risk sentiment through commodity funds and cross-asset positioning. Inflation can support nominal commodity prices over long periods because mining, labor, equipment, and transport costs rise with general price levels. However, the main price mechanism remains physical balance between mine output, port logistics, and end-user demand rather than purely financial valuation.

MonthPriceChange
Jan 2001262.16-
Feb 2001285.408.86%
Mar 2001293.882.97%
Apr 2001305.503.96%
May 2001301.37-1.35%
Jun 2001305.231.28%
Jul 2001308.891.20%
Aug 2001315.102.01%
Sep 2001325.563.32%
Oct 2001342.875.32%
Nov 2001327.21-4.57%
Dec 2001373.4014.12%
Jan 2002364.44-2.40%
Feb 2002346.65-4.88%
Mar 2002339.57-2.04%
Apr 2002330.67-2.62%
May 2002293.82-11.14%
Jun 2002270.93-7.79%
Jul 2002261.02-3.66%
Aug 2002267.862.62%
Sep 2002279.134.21%
Oct 2002300.877.79%
Nov 2002282.05-6.26%
Dec 2002263.98-6.41%
Jan 2003259.28-1.78%
Feb 2003247.52-4.54%
Mar 2003239.93-3.07%
Apr 2003215.12-10.34%
May 2003219.151.88%
Jun 2003237.778.50%
Jul 2003249.544.95%
Aug 2003244.81-1.90%
Sep 2003252.983.34%
Oct 2003285.0812.69%
Nov 2003293.943.11%
Dec 2003290.08-1.31%
Jan 2004321.2110.73%
Feb 2004322.100.28%
Mar 2004323.090.31%
Apr 2004327.831.47%
May 2004359.469.65%
Jun 2004406.0512.96%
Jul 2004443.459.21%
Aug 2004451.921.91%
Sep 2004464.412.76%
Oct 2004452.31-2.60%
Nov 2004429.90-4.96%
Dec 2004388.57-9.61%
Jan 2005381.71-1.76%
Feb 2005356.92-6.50%
Mar 2005325.27-8.87%
Apr 2005319.50-1.77%
May 2005325.761.96%
Jun 2005335.673.04%
Jul 2005350.354.37%
Aug 2005332.43-5.12%
Sep 2005317.19-4.59%
Oct 2005295.94-6.70%
Nov 2005275.34-6.96%
Dec 2005272.90-0.89%
Jan 2006282.633.57%
Feb 2006306.108.30%
Mar 2006346.1613.09%
Apr 2006338.00-2.36%
May 2006335.56-0.72%
Jun 2006379.5513.11%
Jul 2006375.48-1.07%
Aug 2006385.882.77%
Sep 2006369.02-4.37%
Oct 2006384.904.30%
Nov 2006371.71-3.43%
Dec 2006364.33-1.99%
Jan 2007366.880.70%
Feb 2007378.113.06%
Mar 2007393.844.16%
Apr 2007368.79-6.36%
May 2007359.21-2.60%
Jun 2007413.5415.12%
Jul 2007411.38-0.52%
Aug 2007455.9210.83%
Sep 2007448.83-1.56%
Oct 2007501.1211.65%
Nov 2007611.2321.97%
Dec 2007654.217.03%
Jan 2008716.609.54%
Feb 2008898.1325.33%
Mar 2008900.670.28%
Apr 2008860.58-4.45%
May 2008931.298.22%
Jun 20081,139.5322.36%
Jul 20081,302.0914.27%
Aug 20081,216.25-6.59%
Sep 20081,201.56-1.21%
Oct 20081,091.90-9.13%
Nov 2008914.52-16.25%
Dec 2008781.78-14.51%
Jan 2009770.19-1.48%
Feb 2009699.84-9.13%
Mar 2009572.24-18.23%
Apr 2009531.95-7.04%
May 2009464.18-12.74%
Jun 2009457.67-1.40%
Jul 2009457.990.07%
Aug 2009456.26-0.38%
Sep 2009397.72-12.83%
Oct 2009417.184.89%
Nov 2009414.42-0.66%
Dec 2009431.894.21%
Jan 2010470.148.86%
Feb 2010461.37-1.87%
Mar 2010449.79-2.51%
Apr 2010509.5013.28%
May 2010601.6018.08%
Jun 2010611.641.67%
Jul 2010615.500.63%
Aug 2010578.07-6.08%
Sep 2010563.90-2.45%
Oct 2010588.664.39%
Nov 2010636.448.12%
Dec 2010732.7315.13%
Jan 2011798.799.01%
Feb 2011800.730.24%
Mar 2011806.040.66%
Apr 2011806.500.06%
May 2011789.80-2.07%
Jun 2011777.46-1.56%
Jul 2011780.680.41%
Aug 2011816.404.58%
Sep 2011843.553.32%
Oct 2011825.27-2.17%
Nov 2011826.610.16%
Dec 2011804.17-2.71%
Jan 2012771.04-4.12%
Feb 2012692.44-10.19%
Mar 2012674.31-2.62%
Apr 2012691.312.52%
May 2012648.23-6.23%
Jun 2012660.381.87%
Jul 2012669.201.34%
Aug 2012710.266.13%
Sep 2012671.10-5.51%
Oct 2012668.40-0.40%
Nov 2012693.343.73%
Dec 2012704.521.61%
Jan 2013690.67-1.97%
Feb 2013717.433.87%
Mar 2013723.250.81%
Apr 2013683.44-5.50%
May 2013688.010.67%
Jun 2013657.10-4.49%
Jul 2013656.66-0.07%
Aug 2013662.440.88%
Sep 2013652.22-1.54%
Oct 2013671.382.94%
Nov 2013738.5310.00%
Dec 2013760.002.91%
Jan 2014776.172.13%
Feb 2014768.95-0.93%
Mar 2014689.76-10.30%
Apr 2014680.48-1.34%
May 2014693.741.95%
Jun 2014675.72-2.60%
Jul 2014705.154.36%
Aug 2014733.394.01%
Sep 2014719.04-1.96%
Oct 2014706.27-1.78%
Nov 2014705.16-0.16%
Dec 2014730.613.61%
Jan 2015655.60-10.27%
Feb 2015668.892.03%
Mar 2015695.613.99%
Apr 2015664.62-4.45%
May 2015650.36-2.15%
Jun 2015655.030.72%
Jul 2015652.16-0.44%
Aug 2015641.45-1.64%
Sep 2015668.814.27%
Oct 2015656.02-1.91%
Nov 2015716.499.22%
Dec 2015670.07-6.48%
Jan 2016703.865.04%
Feb 2016652.38-7.31%
Mar 2016676.153.64%
Apr 2016630.52-6.75%
May 2016682.568.25%
Jun 2016706.243.47%
Jul 2016781.4310.65%
Aug 2016793.821.59%
Sep 2016854.837.69%
Oct 20161,102.2228.94%
Nov 20161,206.519.46%
Dec 20161,242.703.00%
Jan 20171,134.72-8.69%
Feb 20171,055.56-6.98%
Mar 2017885.20-16.14%
Apr 2017918.203.73%
May 2017902.73-1.68%
Jun 2017955.055.80%
Jul 20171,034.798.35%
Aug 20171,048.461.32%
Sep 20171,089.013.87%
Oct 20171,150.715.67%
Nov 20171,177.812.36%
Dec 20171,111.56-5.63%
Jan 20181,055.42-5.05%
Feb 2018964.91-8.58%
Mar 2018896.47-7.09%
Apr 2018947.735.72%
May 20181,046.5010.42%

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon