Olamide Francis
The trading arm of refining giant Sinopec has suggested that china oil demand is likely more than the official figures published, Nature News gathered.
China is the world’s biggest importer of oil.
Fairy Wang Pei, head of the research and strategy department at Unipec said at the Platts APPEC 2020 conference that Chinese fuel consumption was already back at year-earlier levels in May.
However, purchases of light-cycle oil and mixed aromatics, which aren’t recorded in the crude import data, mean the nation’s demand recovery might be even more impressive than thought, she said.
Oil buying by Chinese refiners has played an outsized role in supporting global prices this year, with Asia’s largest economy emerging from the coronavirus as Europe and the U.S. went into lockdown. Purchases have slowed from a peak in June though — amid port congestion and independent refiners running out of quota — and are forecast to remain sluggish this month.
Chinese imports of mixed aromatics – used for blending into gasoline – have doubled in the first seven months of 2020 from a year earlier, Wang said. Purchases of LCO, used to make diesel, have risen by 115per cent and cutback asphalt shipments have surged almost 800per cent, she said.
Oil demand in China was 3.5per cent lower in January through July from a year earlier, according to data from the National Development and Reform Commission.
“China’s oil demand has recovered at a very fast rate,” Wang said. Actual demand is likely to be larger than the official numbers, she said.