China's July oil refinery output sinks to the lowest since Oct 2022
China's oil refinery output in July fell 6.1% from a year earlier, official data showed on Thursday, down for a fourth month as thin processing margins and tepid fuel demand discouraged production.
Refiners processed 59.06 metric MMt of crude oil in July, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed, equivalent to 13.91 MMbpd, the lowest since October 2022.
The July rate fell from 14.19 MMbpd in June and 14.87 MMbpd in July 2023.
Output for the first seven months of the year was 419.15 MMt, or 14.37 MMbpd, down 1.2% from the corresponding period last year, the data showed. This is the second consecutive month the data has showed the year-to-date volumes have been down from the year-ago period since the end of 2022.
Gasoline demand remained subdued despite a pickup in travel during the summer school holidays that span July and August as consumers chose to travel abroad or opted for high-speed rail for long-distance trips instead of driving.
Chinese consultancy JLC estimated July's apparent consumption of the motor fuel rose 3.3% versus June, a growth rate significantly slower than a year earlier.
A greater penetration of electric vehicles in the world's largest auto market also continued to reduce gasoline use. Half of all vehicles sold in China in July were either new pure electric vehicles (EV) or plug-in hybrids.
Planned overhauls at PetroChina's WEPEC and Ningxia refineries and Sinopec's Qilu and Maoming plants capped runs at state majors, while thin refining margins weighed on independent refiners' processing rates.
Consultancy Oilchem estimated independent refineries, mostly situated in the eastern refining hub of Shandong province, operated at 56.11% of capacity last month, down 7.3 percentage points on the year.
NBS data also showed China's crude oil production in July rose 3.4% from a year earlier to 17.9 MMt, or about 4.22 MMbpd. Year-to-date crude oil output was up 2.1% on the year to 124.96 MMt, or 4.28 MMbpd.
National oil companies have in recent years ramped up production from offshore fields and deeper onshore reservoirs to compensate for declining reserves at mature fields such as Daqing and Shengli to boost supply security.
Natural gas production maintained robust growth, rising last month by 7.9% from a year earlier to 20 Bm3, and output between January and July grew 6.2% to 143.6 Bm3.
(1 metric ton=7.3 barrels crude oil)
Comments