China, the world's largest energy user, is likely to have a serious excess in refining capacity amid booming domestic demand for oil products, a senior oil executive said on Wednesday.
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He warned that if the country doesn't address the problem of excess capacity in oil refining, the industry will soon have a serious surplus, similar to the one now existing in the country's iron and steel sectors.
The refinery capacity in China is expected to reach 740 million tons in 2015 and increase to 910 million tons in 2020 with an operating rate of only 67 percent, much lower than the 72-75 percent rate of the steel industry, according to Fu, also a member of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
As a result, the surplus in the industry will rise to a whopping 220 million and 300 million tons by 2015 and 2020, respectively. The refining capacity is forecast to overtake the growth of oil product consumption in the country in the same period, said a report released by the China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Federation (CPCIF).
The country had only a modest excess capacity-of about 6 million tons-back in 2009, when the refining capacity was about 227 million tons and domestic consumption totaled about 221 million tons.
China's booming auto sector, with its soaring demand for oil fuel, coupled with the country's rapid economic growth, were some of the reasons behind the refining industry's rising output.
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