THE State planning agency has called on regions and enterprises to adopt effective measures to keep coal prices stable as its power utilities struggle with rising costs and the government wrestles with inflation.
In a notice posted on its Web site, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said it would crack down on all illegal pricing activities unearthed during an investigation into the sector.
The NDRC urged coal enterprises to strengthen self-discipline when it comes to maintaining price stability.
It said companies should keep contract coal prices with power firms at 2010 levels, and were not permitted to raise prices in any form.
Enterprises found to have violated China s macroeconomic control regulations by driving up prices or selling lower quality coal will be severely punished, the notice said.
China keeps electricity prices under tight control, and its big State-owned utilities have suffered big declines in profits because they have been unable to pass surging coal costs onto consumers.
The country s biggest electricity producer, Huaneng Power said last week that its earnings in the fourth quarter of 2010 plunged 75 percent.
The problem has raised the spectre of power shortages as China approaches the summer electricity consumption peak.
The NDRC said coal companies should improve coordination with power plants when it came to guaranteeing supplies, adding that they were not permitted to segment the market by restricting cross-province deliveries.
A government source said last week that China was considering raising regional power prices for the first time since late 2009.
The price hikes would be limited to industrial consumers, with the government still reluctant to risk public wrath and more inflationary pressure by raising household tariffs.(SD-Agencies)