Diesel, petrol export boom extends to May (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-04-25 10:16
China's diesel and gasoline export frenzy was set to extend into its third
month in May as rising domestic production outpaced easing demand growth,
domestic oil traders said.
Fuelling the rare trend is the Chinese Government's cap on domestic retail
oil products below global benchmarks, which has led to big losses at Chinese
refineries and stoked speculation that the government might soon raise diesel
prices if crude held above US$50 a barrel.
Domestic traders said China planned to skip importing diesel for next month
and would export about 80,000 tons.
A surge in sales abroad flipped China back into a net exporter of diesel in
March, the first time since late 2003, with first-quarter shipments up 66
percent on the year to 18,000 barrels per day (bpd), Chinese customs data
showed.
Chinese refineries were raising domestic output by running expanded plants
near full rates. Crude throughput in March rose 10.8 percent on the year to 5.81
million bpd, taking first-quarter runs up 8.1 percent to a record 5.83 million
bpd, official data showed.
Domestic distribution officials said the export boom helped to thin diesel
stocks from their high levels earlier this year, but there were no alarming
signs of shortages.
Traders estimated total Chinese gasoline exports in April at 670,000 tons,
down from the 18-month high of 770,000 tons in March, but well above the
first-quarter average.
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