HC Deb 28 November 1983 vol 49 cc398-9W
Mr. Mason

asked the Secretary of State for Energy (1) what contracts are still outstanding on the importation of coal; for how long these contracts will continue; and if he will list the countries concerned;

(2) whether negotiations are currently taking place to establish fresh coal import contracts; to what extent his Department is involved; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Giles Shaw

The negotiation of contracts for purchasing coal, whether from home or abroad, is a commercial matter for the industries concerned. My Department is not involved and is not in a position to provide the information requested on individual contracts.

Mr. Mason

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what discussion he has had within the European Community and the European Coal and Steel Community on halting the imports of third country coal and expanding the sales of British coal within the Community; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Giles Shaw

Over the past two years there have been discussions at a number of Councils of Energy Ministers on the role of solid fuels in Community energy strategy. The United Kingdom has been pressing for the adoption of Commission proposals for Community support for viable investment in coal production. If agreed this could help to reduce the growth of Community coal imports from third countries. The NCB is currently exporting between 5 and 6 million tonnes of coal per year to other Community countries. The future level of these export sales will depend primarily on the progress which the coal industry makes in controlling costs and increasing competitiveness.

Our Community partners are not prepared to import coal at more than market price and look to low-cost producers such as Australia and the USA as their main sources of overseas supply.

Mr. Mason

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what tonnage of South African coal is currently imported; and for what purpose.

Mr. Giles Shaw

In the first nine months of 1983 the United Kingdom imported 26,000 tonnes of coal from South Africa, mostly anthracite for household use. The NCB produced 1 million tonnes of anthracite in the same period but this was insufficient to meet home demand in full.

Mr. Mason

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what tonnage of Polish coal is currently being imported; and for what purpose.

Mr. Giles Shaw

During the first nine months of this year 266,000 tonnes of coal were imported into the United Kingdom from Poland, mostly for conversion to coke for use in the steel industry. The NCB supplied 3 million tonnes of coal to the BSC in the same period but has insufficient economically workable reserves of the particular types of coking coal required to supply all the Corporation's requirements for modern blast furnaces.

Mr. Mason

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what imports of coal into the United Kingdom are subsidised; what tonnages and from what source.

Mr. Shaw

About 20 per cent. of United Kingdom coal imports in the first nine months of 1983 came from countries which subsidise their coal industries to varying degrees:

Thousand tonnes
Western Europe
France 7
Belgium 45
Federal Republic of Germany 395
Eastern Europe
Poland 266
German Democratic Republic 12
USSR 16

In total these imports were equivalent to less than one per cent. of United Kingdom coal consumption.

Mr. Mason

asked the Secretary of State for Energy what annual tonnage of coal is being consumed by district heating techniques in industrial buildings.

Mr. Shaw

The National Coal Board estimates that the amount of coal consumed annually for industrial combined heat and power purposes is about 3 million tonnes.