Whitehaven Coal Chief Executive Paul Flynn has said the government appeared to be looking to secure around 3 million to 5 million tonnes, but the company was pressing the state to explain how that shortfall estimate had been determined. Directions issued in December required a dozen coal mines that supply power plants in New South Wales to fill a shortfall in supply at a capped price of A$125 a tonne - well below the export price currently at about $265 a tonne - under a deal with the federal government.
The mines are mainly owned by Glencore Plc , Peabody Energy , New Hope Corp and Thailand's Banpu PCL . The state now wants to spread the requirement to all the state's coal producers, including those that export all of their output, including BHP Group , Whitehaven Coal and Yancoal Australia . BHP has said the new policy could affect its plan to keep its Mt Arthur coal mine, the state's largest single coal mine, open until 2030. (Reporting by Sonali Paul; Additional reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)