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BEIJING, Sept. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- China will not
import crude oil to fill its reserve when the oil price remains high, a senior
government official said in Beijing Tuesday.
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| Zhang Guobao, deputy director the State
Development and Reform Commission, said China will not use imported oil to
fill its strategic reserve at a press conference in Beijing September 13,
2005. [Xinhua] | "It would be a great financial
risk for China to buy oil at the international market for its strategic reserve
program as the current global oil price has been fluctuating at a high level,"
said Zhang Guobao, deputy director the State Development and Reform Commission.
China will study other ways to gradually increase the
state oil reserve, said Zhang at a press conference of the Information Office of
the State Council, the country's cabinet.
China has started to formulate plans for the state
oil reserve and construction of some oil reserve facilities are under way.
As for the scale of China's oil reserve, Zhang said
some people suggest it should be equivalent to the amount of 90 days of oil
consumption, while others hold it should be equivalent to that of a 120-day
consumption.
"This (scale) should be determined according to
China's real conditions," Zhang said.
It's not necessary for China to build up a state oil
reserve as big as that of Japan which has to import every drop of oil from the
world market, while China can satisfy most of the domestic demand with the crude
produced at home, he added.
According to him, China is expected to produce 180
million tons of crude oil in 2005, compared with 175 million tons last year,
when the country imported 117 million tons.
China's oil import accounted for 6.31 percent of the
world total, 23 percent of that of the United States and 56 percent of that of
Japan.
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| An undated file photo shows the
construction site of the Zhenhai oil
reserve. | According to the official, China's
energy production can feed 94 percent of its demand, while import is resorted to
for the remaining 6 percent.
This means China's energy self-sufficiency rate is
over 20 percent higher than the average of countries of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development, said Zhang.
China's per capita primary energy consumption is 1.08
tons of oil equivalent, 66 percent of the world average and 13.4 percent of the
United States, Zhang said.
In 2004, China's primary energy production amounted
to 1.845 billion tons of coal equivalent (TCE) and total energy consumption
reached 1.97 billion TCE, which made the country the second largest energy
producer and consumer in the world.
China also exported 80 million tons of coal in 2004,
and its coking coal export accounted for 56 percent of the world trade. Enditem
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