Exclusive: China suspends national rollout of ethanol
mandate - sources
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[January 08, 2020] By
Hallie Gu, Muyu Xu and Shivani Singh
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has suspended its
plan to implement a nationwide gasoline blend containing 10% ethanol
this year, three sources briefed on the matter said, following a sharp
decline in the country's corn stocks and limited production capacity of
the biofuel.
Beijing announced in September 2017 that the national gasoline supply
would contain 10% ethanol from 2020, part of a broad reform of its corn
industry that at the time was suffering from a massive surplus.
But at a meeting in late December with ethanol producers and oil majors,
China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said it will
now halt the rollout of ethanol-gasoline supplies beyond the current
handful of provinces that have already implemented full or partial
blends, according to two of the three sources briefed on the meeting.
Beijing's mandate - known as the E10 target - was conceived as a way to
digest the country's huge state corn reserves and reduce pollution in
the world's largest car market by using the cleaner-burning fuel.
The reversal is a heavy blow to domestic producers that have built new
plants, as well as biofuel exporters, including the United States and
Brazil, which were looking to benefit from growing Chinese demand.
The United States exported about 20% of its fuel ethanol to China in
2016, trade worth about $300 million that year. American shipments have
since plunged to a trickle. Beijing hiked import duties on ethanol in
2017 to 30% and then added trade war tariffs on U.S. cargoes twice
during 2018, amounting to another 40%.
China was expected to sharply increase imports of U.S. ethanol under
Phase 1 of the recently announced trade deal, but is now unlikely to
require large ethanol supplies without the mandate.
"The decision was made after further study, which suggests any promotion
of ethanol gasoline must be based on the precondition that food security
is guaranteed," said one of the sources familiar with Beijing's plan, in
reference to declining grain reserves in China.
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Stunted corn pictured inside a rattan basket in a cornfield at
Nuodong village of Menghai county in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous
Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China, July 13, 2019. REUTERS/Aly
Song/File Photo
Executives from China National Petroleum Corporation Limited [CNPET.UL] (CNPC),
and Sinopec also attended the NDRC meeting in December, according to one of the
sources. The sources declined to be named as they were not authorized to talk to
the media.
NDRC, the National Energy Administration (NEA), CNPC and Sinopec did not
immediately reply to faxes seeking comment.
Six other contacts including producers, traders and analysts also said the
government rollout of the mandate has significantly slowed or stalled, with few
new plants built or markets opened in the past few months.
"There is a big shortage of production capacity and few places have made
breakthroughs (with the mandate rollout,)" said Michael Mao, analyst with
Sublime China Information.
"I think the promotion has slowed. Maybe we need to wait until after 2020," Mao
said.
Reaching the 2020 target would have required about 15 million ton of the biofuel
annually, more than four times current output, or some 45 million ton of corn,
which is about 16% of the country's current consumption.
The country does not disclose state grain reserve levels but state stockpiles of
corn have fallen to around 56 million ton from more than 200 million tonnes in
temporary reserves in 2017, a government expert said in September last year.
(Reporting by Hallie Gu, Muyu Xu, and Shivani Singh; editing by David Evans)
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