Oil imports climb, product imports slide (Shenzhen Daily) Updated: 2005-06-27 16:26
China, the world's second-largest oil consumer, imported 8.2 percent more
crude oil in May than a year earlier, while imported of refined petroleum
products fell sharply, official figures showed.
China imported 10.41 million tons of crude oil last month or 2.45 million
barrels per day (bpd), equivalent to the average for 2004 and down sharply from
around 3 million bpd in April, signaling that demand could be slowing.
Refiners kept processing rates high through the month, taking advantage of
strong export markets and cutting costly imports of refined oil products.
Imports of light diesel fell 91.6 percent to 25,313 tons compared with the
same period of 2004, while fuel oil shipments slid 40.7 percent to 1.61 million
tons, the General Administration of Customs said.
Shipments of gasoline - China's largest single product export category - were
up 47 percent at 671,754 tons while exports of diesel soared 141 percent
compared with the previous year to 132,476 tons.
The International Energy Agency said earlier this month that China's rapid
oil demand growth contracted in April as refiners ran down stocks and cut
petroleum product imports. It shaved its demand growth estimate for the year by
10,000 bpd to 7.1 percent.
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