Chart
Description: Coal, Australian thermal coal, 12000- btu/pound, less than 1% sulfur, 14% ash, FOB Newcastle/Port Kembla, US$ per metric tonne
Unit: US Dollars per Metric Ton
Source: International Monetary Fund
See also: Energy production and consumption statistics
| Month | Value |
| May 2009 | 69.11 |
| Jun 2009 | 76.48 |
| Jul 2009 | 79.07 |
| Aug 2009 | 77.68 |
| Sep 2009 | 72.47 |
| Oct 2009 | 76.15 |
Related News
Top growth fund manager dumps Apple, Google
The Malaysian Insider - 2009/11/25 07:24:13
BOSTON, Nov 25 — Jerry Jordan, one of the top-performing US growth fund managers over the past three years, says he’s sold all his holdings of Apple and Google because their stock prices had gotten too expensive. In fact, he is shunning virtually all technology stocks based in the United States and Europe. Instead, he has piled into what he considers the new darlings of the market: small Chinese ...
Joint bid for Ravensthorpe
Perth Now - 2009/11/25 02:00:00
CHINA Metallurgical Group Corp has approached nickel miner Minara Resources to launch a joint bid for BHP Billiton's idled Ravensthorpe nickel mine.
(AFX UK Focus) 2009-11-23 19:48 UPDATE 1-New Zealand/Australia Morning Call-Global markets
Interactive Investor - 2009/11/23 20:13:07
-----------------------(06:31 / 1931 GMT)----------------------- Stock Markets S&P/ASX 200 4,717.04 +31.28 NZSX 50 3,112.98 -0.60 DJIA 10,439.31 +121.15 Nikkei 9,497.68 -51.79 NASDAQ 2,171.76 +25.72 FTSE 5,355.50 +104.09 S&P 500 1,104.72 +13.34 Hang Seng 22,455.84 +315.55 SPI 200 Fut 4,753.00 +24.00 CRB Index 274.92 +0.34
Up against a great wall
News.com.au - 2009/11/23 13:00:00
SEEN the ad for the new Great Wall ute? The young Aussie bloke in the flannelette shirt reckons the greatest thing about the made-in-China ute…
(AFX UK Focus) 2009-11-23 10:37 SE Asia Stocks-Mostly weaker, but financials lift Singapore
Interactive Investor - 2009/11/23 11:13:40
By Viparat Jantraprap
Uranium and Gold Exploration Spending Both Down in Last Year
The Daily Reckoning - 2009/11/20 05:39:53
It turns out they are, just not in Australia. The ABARE numbers measure exploration spending within Australia. But many Australian-listed firms are looking for gold and uranium in other places, especially in Africa. They're doing so because production costs are lower there, even if political risk is higher (although in some places, it's more than acceptable for the projects on offer).
Ore prices not so iron-clad
The Age - 2009/11/20 02:11:30
A bonanza in new iron ore mining projects may herald lower prices, a leading analyst says.