China to lift Aug fuel exports but 2022 shipments to drop to 7-year lows
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[August 15, 2022] By
Chen Aizhu and Muyu Xu
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China's fuel product
exports will rebound in August to near the highest for the year so far
after Beijing issued more quotas in June and July, although broader
curbs are set to cap shipments at seven-year lows for 2022, analysts and
traders said.
The rebound in fuel exports from China, the world's second-biggest
producer of refined fuels, has helped cool global prices that hit record
highs in May and June as western sanctions on Russia following the
Ukraine war tightened global markets.
Shipments are expected to level off over the rest of the year, however,
as Beijing prioritises the local market to curb domestic fuel inflation.
Diesel, gasoline and jet fuel exports for the year are expected to be as
much as 40% lower from 2021.
With the drop-off in China - once Asia's top gasoline exporter and a key
diesel supplier - fuel importers will have to rely on South Korea, India
and the Middle East, analysts said.
"With China staying in a scale-back mode so far, it is certainly an
opportunity for export-oriented refiners in the rest of Asia and Middle
East to supply the shorts in Europe and U.S.," said Mukesh Sadhav, head
of downstream and oil trading at consultancy Rystad Energy.
Graphic: China's exports of diesel, gasoline and jet fuel seen hitting
7-yr low
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/znvnerlxwpl/Exports%20of
%20gasoline%20diesel%20jet%20fuel%20since%202015.jpg
Asian refiners outside China are expected to raise their crude
throughput 10%-15% this year from 2021, while China's output may be flat
as a rebound in the second half offsets a rare decline in the first six
months of the year, Sadhav said.
China's July refinery runs fell to their lowest in more than two years,
data showed on Monday, with year-to-date volumes down 6.3% from a year
earlier.
AUGUST REBOUND
China's diesel exports are expected to show the most dramatic rise for
August, topping one million tonnes for the first time since July 2021 as
state refiners clear overflowing inventories that have swelled since
COVID-19 lockdowns stifled consumption, estimates from Refinitiv and
Chinese commodities consultancy JLC showed.
"The higher (diesel) sales come at an inopportune time ... with India
poised to raise exports as it seeks to reverse its current account
deficit, while South Korea has been plagued with surplus diesel," said
Refinitiv analyst Zameer Yusof.
Exports of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel combined are pegged at 2.4
million to 2.6 million tonnes for August, near China's highest so far
this year, according to JLC and a trading source.
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A pumpjack is seen at the
Sinopec-operated Shengli oil field in Dongying, Shandong province,
China January 12, 2017. Picture taken January 12, 2017. REUTERS/Chen
Aizhu/File Photo
These higher exports have worked to cool Asia's refining profits from the
records of June.
DOMESTICALLY FOCUSED
Still, China's annual exports of diesel, gasoline and aviation fuel are forecast
to drop 30%-40% from 2021 to between 23 million and 27 million tonnes, according
to consultancies Energy Aspects and JLC. That would be the lowest since 2015.
This suggests monthly exports will hold near the recent pace over the rest of
2022 as China has already exported nearly 12 million tonnes of products in the
first half.
"Capturing short-term export profits is not the government's priority,
maintaining ample supplies at home and containing domestic inflation is," said a
Beijing-based trading executive.
Graphic: Asian fuel products refining margins
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/znpnerlkwvl/Asian%20cracks.png
Beijing has issued fuel export quotas of 22.5 million tonnes so far in 2022 and
may not issue more amid a tax probe into independent refiners and ahead of a
seasonal demand peak in September and October that will tighten domestic
supplies, JLC said in a note.
JLC expects 2022 diesel exports to shrink by 74% from 2021 to 4.5 million tonnes
and gasoline to fall nearly 40% to 9 million tonnes. Only aviation fuel exports
will rise, up 11% to 9.5 million tonnes, JLC said, as COVID-19 lockdowns and
border controls cut domestic and international Chinese flights.
Data from VariFlight, a China-based flight data service, showed China's domestic
passenger and cargo air traffic in July was 20% lower versus July 2019, while
traffic to and from international destinations was only 3% of July 2019.
Graphic: China paces down refinery production, curbs fuel exports
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/gdpzyokmzvw/chart%20of%20crude%20runs%20vs%20fuel%20exports.jpg
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu and Muyu Xu; Editing by Florence Tan and Tom Hogue)
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