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China ports brace for more bad weatherChina ports brace for more bad weather

Already hampered by heavy snowfall across wide swathes of the country last week which affected deliveries of key commodities such as thermal and coking coal and liquefied natural gas (LNG), China looks set for more supply issues as a cold front brings continued bad weather this week, wire reports said.

Vincent Wee, Hong Kong and South East Asia Correspondent

January 9, 2018

1 Min Read
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The world’s top energy consumer warned of more snow and sleet hitting the northern, central and eastern parts of the country. These conditions closed highways and ports delayed deliveries while coal prices have spiked due to transport disruptions.

China’s weather service issued strong wind and cold spell warnings for coastal regions Tianjin City and Liaoning province and also an icy road warning for the latter.

This could affect deliveries as truck-based coal shipments from eastern Shandong province across the Bohai Bay, where ports such as Qingdao and Weihai are, were stopped last week due to the poor conditions. Weather forecasts do not however predict the same amount of precipitation in the days ahead.

Heavy snowfall last week also caused some delays of LNG imports from major terminals, such as Sinopec’s Qingdao terminal as transportation of gas by trucks was curtailed.

Just last month CNOOC had to charter trucks to transport LNG from its southern LNG receiving terminals to meet supply shortfalls as its sole terminal at Tianjin could not keep up with demand. A similar weather-created supply squeeze could see a similar situation arise after the icy conditions ease.

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About the Author

Vincent Wee

Hong Kong and South East Asia Correspondent

Vincent Wee is Seatrade's Hong Kong correspondent covering Hong Kong and South China while also making use of his Malay language skills to cover the Malaysia and Indonesia markets. He has gained a keen insight and extensive knowledge of the offshore oil and gas markets gleaned while covering major rig builders and offshore supply vessel providers.

Vincent has been a journalist for over 15 years, spending the bulk of his career with Singapore's biggest business daily the Business Times, and covering shipping and logistics since 2007. Prior to that he spent several years working for Brunei's main English language daily as well as various other trade publications.

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