China to resume U.S. LPG imports as Beijing waives
trade-war tariff: sources
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[March 25, 2020] By
Chen Aizhu
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China has begun
buying U.S. liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) again after a hiatus of nearly
20 months as Beijing waived punitive tariffs to boost imports of U.S.
goods as part of the Sino-U.S. Phase 1 trade deal, industry sources
said.
Importers have rushed to apply for waivers for the 25% tariff to buy the
fuel, a by-product from U.S. shale gas production, after Beijing started
granting exemptions this month for nearly 700 U.S. goods.
About a dozen firms - including China Gas Holdings <0384.HK>, a piped
gas distributor and LPG trader, and Oriental Energy <002221.SZ>, a
manufacturer using LPG to make petrochemicals - have been granted the
tariff waivers, according to two veteran LPG traders, an investment
officer and analysts at IHS Markit.
With the exemptions, U.S. LPG is subject only to a 1% import duty, same
as rival supplies from the Middle East.
"U.S. LPG provides us a diversified source of supply to keep our overall
import cost low," said Tan Yuwei, an investor relation officer with
China Gas, adding that the firm has booked 60,000 tonnes of U.S. fuel
for late April arrival.
An official with Oriental Energy confirmed his company won a tariff
exemption but declined to comment on any purchases.
The LPG traders declined to be named because they are not authorized to
speak with the press.
Yanyu He, IHS Markit's Houston-based senior analyst for natural gas
liquids, said he expected Chinese bookings of U.S. cargoes to re-emerge
from April, although the sudden crash of oil prices to sub-$30 a barrel
will see U.S. LPG output decline.
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Chinese and U.S. flags flutter near The Bund, before U.S. trade
delegation meet their Chinese counterparts for talks in Shanghai,
China July 30, 2019. REUTERS/Aly Song
China may have booked an estimated five U.S. cargoes totaling 220,000 tonnes so
far, said a Beijing-based IHS analyst who also declined to be named as he is not
authorized to speak to the media. This analyst said a slow rebound in Chinese
petrochemical production following the coronavirus outbreak could hold back
purchases.
The resumption of U.S. trade is set to weigh on prices of competing cargoes from
Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
Benchmark U.S. spot butane prices <BUT-USG> in Mont Belvieu, Texas, have lost
two-thirds of their values over the past month, dropping to their lowest since
at least 1990 at $0.21 per U.S. gallon, primarily tracking the free-fall in oil
prices.
That is equivalent to about $95 per tonne, and compares with April Asian LPG
paper at $150 a tonne.
China was the No.2 buyer of U.S. LPG exports in 2017, with purchases at 3.6
million tonnes, then worth some $2 billion. Imports began shrinking in late 2018
and nearly dried up last year during the prolonged U.S.-China trade war.
U.S. LPG, typically in 44,000 tonne cargoes and sailing through the Panama
Canal, takes about two weeks to get to China.
LPG consists of propane and butane used for heating and making petrochemicals.
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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