澳洲大水的消息,对煤铁能有多大影响? (ZZ 油油)# Stock
k*n
1 楼
发信人: OILOIL (耐心加胆量!), 信区: Stock
标 题: Re: TEDDY与时俱进,价值投资的忠实信徒
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Jan 4 16:30:01 2011, 美东)
BRISBANE, Australia, Jan. 4 (UPI) -- The long-term effect of Australia's
flooding will be "significant" on the economy, a Queensland official said.
Across northeastern Australia, at least 200,000 people have been affected
torrential rains and floods, covering 386,000 square miles -- an area about
the size of France and Germany combined.
State Treasurer Andrew Fraser of Queensland, Australia's worst-hit state,
estimates damage from the floods "will run into billions -- not millions --
of dollars," the BBC quoted him as saying Tuesday.
BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's biggest coking-coal producer, Rio Tinto PLC,
Anglo American PLC and Peabody Energy Corp. are among mine companies that
have declared force majeure on their Queensland coalfields. This clause
allows a miner to miss contracted deliveries because of conditions beyond
the company's control.
"It's going to be hard work to get back into full production," Michael Roche
, chief executive of the Queensland Resources Council, told the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation Tuesday, noting that the damage to the state's coal
industry has already reached about $1 billion.
"Mines have a lot of water to deal with and so we'll be talking to the
Queensland government about some practical measures to safely get rid of
excess water."
Queensland Premier Anna Bligh, pointing out that her state supplies half of
the world's coking coal needed in steel manufacture, told ABC that coal
mining companies "will have a long, slow climb back to full production."
Steel trader Stemcor predicted the floods could drive the price of coking
coal up about 30 percent over the next few months to $330 a metric ton, The
Wall Street Journal reports.
Queensland's agriculture sector is also severely affected by the floods.
"A significant proportion of wheat has been destroyed," Wayne Newton,
president of Agforce, a Queensland farmer's lobby group, told the BBC.
"What has been retrieved has been downgraded to animal feed and will not be
used for making bread."
Queensland produces about 5 percent of Australia's wheat. Australia is also
the world's fourth biggest wheat exporter, providing critical supplies to
Asia.
Mark Gold, managing partner at Top Third Ag Marketing in Chicago, told ABC
that the damage to Queensland's wheat crop is contributing to worldwide
shortages and pushing up prices.
"We've gone from $7.05 a bushel to $8.63 a bushel of Kansas City wheat. So
that's … a little bit more than 20 percent increase, so it's been a direct
correlation."
Gold said Queensland's sugar cane crop has also "certainly been affected" by
the floods and was having an effect on sugar prices, already at their
highest level in nearly 30 years.
标 题: Re: TEDDY与时俱进,价值投资的忠实信徒
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Jan 4 16:30:01 2011, 美东)
BRISBANE, Australia, Jan. 4 (UPI) -- The long-term effect of Australia's
flooding will be "significant" on the economy, a Queensland official said.
Across northeastern Australia, at least 200,000 people have been affected
torrential rains and floods, covering 386,000 square miles -- an area about
the size of France and Germany combined.
State Treasurer Andrew Fraser of Queensland, Australia's worst-hit state,
estimates damage from the floods "will run into billions -- not millions --
of dollars," the BBC quoted him as saying Tuesday.
BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's biggest coking-coal producer, Rio Tinto PLC,
Anglo American PLC and Peabody Energy Corp. are among mine companies that
have declared force majeure on their Queensland coalfields. This clause
allows a miner to miss contracted deliveries because of conditions beyond
the company's control.
"It's going to be hard work to get back into full production," Michael Roche
, chief executive of the Queensland Resources Council, told the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation Tuesday, noting that the damage to the state's coal
industry has already reached about $1 billion.
"Mines have a lot of water to deal with and so we'll be talking to the
Queensland government about some practical measures to safely get rid of
excess water."
Queensland Premier Anna Bligh, pointing out that her state supplies half of
the world's coking coal needed in steel manufacture, told ABC that coal
mining companies "will have a long, slow climb back to full production."
Steel trader Stemcor predicted the floods could drive the price of coking
coal up about 30 percent over the next few months to $330 a metric ton, The
Wall Street Journal reports.
Queensland's agriculture sector is also severely affected by the floods.
"A significant proportion of wheat has been destroyed," Wayne Newton,
president of Agforce, a Queensland farmer's lobby group, told the BBC.
"What has been retrieved has been downgraded to animal feed and will not be
used for making bread."
Queensland produces about 5 percent of Australia's wheat. Australia is also
the world's fourth biggest wheat exporter, providing critical supplies to
Asia.
Mark Gold, managing partner at Top Third Ag Marketing in Chicago, told ABC
that the damage to Queensland's wheat crop is contributing to worldwide
shortages and pushing up prices.
"We've gone from $7.05 a bushel to $8.63 a bushel of Kansas City wheat. So
that's … a little bit more than 20 percent increase, so it's been a direct
correlation."
Gold said Queensland's sugar cane crop has also "certainly been affected" by
the floods and was having an effect on sugar prices, already at their
highest level in nearly 30 years.