SHANGHAI, July 2 (Xinhua) -- China will use up to 350 million tons of oil
this year, ten million tons more than last year, said an expert with the
country's top economic planner.
High oil prices have impacted the nation's energy budget, said Jiang
Xinmin, an expert with the Energy Institute under the State Development and
Reform Commission (NDRC), adding that the country might replace oil with gas in
some areas.
Jiang said domestic oil production was increasing at around 1.5 percent a
year, whereas oil consumption had jumped by about 8 percent a year since 2002,
compelling China to import more.
As recently as ten years ago, he said, the country had been a net oil
exporter but in 2006, nearly 50 percent of China's oil consumption was imported
from abroad.
International oil prices have risen from 25 U.S. dollars per barrel in 2003
to 70 U.S. dollars these days. "The unrest in the Middle East adds to oil price
uncertainties in the global market," said Jiang.
Despite the high price of crude, production in China's large oil refineries
has scarcely increased because petrochemical companies are struggling to deal
with rising production costs, said the expert.
In 2006, China imported 139 million tons of crude oil, up 17 percent on
2005. Imports accounted for 47 percent of the country's consumption. Industry
observers have warned China will likely need to import more than 50 percent of
its petroleum needs in a year or two.