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China hikes fuel prices

Crude up in Asia on cold weather, Chinese energy demand
Singapore (AFP) Dec 22, 2010 - Brent crude prices reached new two-year highs in Asian trade Wednesday as oil continued rallying on cold weather and bullish energy demand from China, analysts said. Brent North Sea crude for February delivery rose 29 cents to 93.49 dollars per barrel -- its highest level since October 2008. The contract had closed at 93.20 dollars on Tuesday after setting a two-year high in intraday trade.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in February gained 11 cents to 89.93 dollars. "Oil prices remain supported on cold weather and strong demand indications, with Chinese oil demand, along with gasoline, diesel and jet fuel demand, surging to record highs in November," Barclays Capital said in a report. Icy weather across Europe and northeastern US states -- which forecasters said would last till the end of the year -- would lift crude prices as demand for heating oil increased.

Final Chinese oil consumption data for November released Tuesday also showed the world's biggest energy consumer's use "at a record high of 9.33 mb/d (million barrels per day)," the Barclays Capital report stated. The level was "up a phenomenal 1.145 mb/d (14 percent) y/y (year-on-year), the strongest y/y growth rate since February this year," it added. "Q4 (The fourth quarter) has seen an acceleration of Chinese oil demand growth once again... To state that Chinese oil demand has surprised to the upside this year is a no-brainer, but we have a strong suspicion that upside surprises and the resultant global demand upgrades have not yet run their full course," the report said.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Dec 22, 2010
China has announced fuel price hikes of about 4 percent.

The National Development and Reform Commission, the country's top economic planner, said gasoline prices would rise by $46.55 a ton and diesel prices by $45 a ton.

The NDRC said the price hike, announced Tuesday, was intended to restrain increases in the country's oil consumption while boosting energy conservation. It estimated that China's dependence on imported oil is likely to hit 55 percent by the end of this year, from 33 percent in 2009.

The hike follows an earlier NDRC announcement on Tuesday that China's apparent oil consumption -- domestic production plus imports minus exports -- rose 15.2 percent year on year to 20.07 million tons in November.

"It is a choice made for the general economy and long-term development," the director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University told People's Daily Online. "The purpose is to further reform the price-forming mechanism of resources and restrain excessive growth of domestic demand for refined oil."

The price hike "was unexpected, but reasonable," Ding Shaoheng, an analyst at PetroChina's research unit, told Xinhua, China's state-owned news agency.

Beginning in 2009, the Chinese government adopted an oil pricing mechanism whereby the NDRC adjusts the country's retail fuel prices when the international crude oil price changes by more than 4 percent over 22 consecutive working days.

International oil prices have increased by more than 8 percent in the past two months.

The fuel hike comes as China faces rising inflation, after the country's consumer price index rose 5.1 percent in November, a 28-month high. Yet officials said the fuel increase wouldn't further worsen inflation.

Liu Zhenqiu, vice director of the NDRC's price department, said the fuel hike had been postponed after considering "the current consumer price level and the overall supply and demand condition in the domestic oil market," noting that China's fuel prices were not closely following international pricing trends, China Daily reports.

Public transportation systems wouldn't be allowed to raise fuel surcharges as a result of the nationwide fuel hike, the NDRC said.

The International Energy Agency said in a July report that China had surpassed the United States as the world's largest energy consumer.

It predicts China's hunger for energy will rise by 75 percent until 2035, when it will account for more than one-third of global demand.



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