Anglo announces coal EBITDA of US$589 million
Published by Jonathan Rowland,
Editor
World Coal,
Anglo American’s coal segment recorded underlying or EBITDA of US$589 million in 1H15 – down from US$638 million on the same period last year – on production of 47.9 million t and revenue of US$2.6 billion.
Australia and Canada coal output up
EBITDA at the company’s Australian and Canadian operations was up to US$324 million from US$307 million in 2014, reflecting cost reductions of US$141 million and the impact of a weaker Australian dollar. This was offset by a 14% drop in average quarterly hard coking coal prices, which cut earnings by US$236 million.
Total coal production increased by 4% despite the closure of its Peace River Coal operations in Canada. Total Australian production jumped by 10% on strong performance at underground longwall operations, where production increased by 29%.
South Africa and Colombia
In South Africa, underlying EBITDA dropped substantially from US$227 million in 2014 to US$182 million in the first six months of this year on weaker export thermal coal prices. Weaker prices also hit Colombian earnings, which saw a drop of 36% to US$61 million.
Production for coal for trade from South Africa increased by 4% and for export, also by 4%, on an 11% jump in production at underground output following the implementation of the Management Operation System at Geodehoop and Zibulo. But Eskom production was down 10% as the utility reduced offtake from New Vaal and New Denmark, while there was also unplanned maintenance on the dragline at Isibonelo.
Colombian production increased slightly to 5.9 million t as the operation benefited from productivity improvements to its waste-hauling trucks and favourable weather.
Coal cutting remains the focus
Costs were cut across operations with Australian underground operations costs dropping by 22%, Australian opencast costs down 5% and South African cash costs down 3%.
“The transformation of Anglo American that I set out 18 months ago is progressing, despite considerable external challenges,” said Anglo’s CEO, Mark Cutifani. “We are making fundamental changes to transform Anglo American – operationally, structurally and culturally – into a fit for purpose organisation with an enhanced resource endowment.”
Overall, Anglo American announced a US$3 billion loss for 1H15 on the back of commodity price-driven writedowns of US$3.5 billion.
Written by Jonathan Rowland.
Read the article online at: https://www.worldcoal.com/mining/24072015/anglo-american-announces-coal-ebitda-of-us589-million-/
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