BEIJING, May 22 (Xinhua) -- China's economic planning
department on Thursday dismissed as a "groundless rumor" reports saying the
country might liberalize the prices of refined oil and natural gas soon.
"Those reports and allegations that the government
might liberalize oil and gas prices in advance, in June at the earliest, are
groundless," an anonymous official with the National Development and Reform
Commission (NDRC) told Xinhua.
Thursday's Shanghai Securities News also ruled out
the possibility that China will end its grip on prices in the near future.
According to the newspaper, there were news reports
on Wednesday alleging that the NDRC, the National Energy Bureau and the
country's two largest energy companies, namely PetroChina and Sinopec, were in
the final stage of their discussions about the liberalization of the fuel
prices.
These reports claimed that the authorities would
probably end price control on oil and gas in June, instead of the
originally-planned August.
These reports had helped boost the share prices of
PetroChina and Sinopec at the Shanghai stock market on Wednesday afternoon. The
two stocks gained 9.99 percent and 6.63 percent respectively at the close.
The Shanghai Securities News, citing an official
source, dismissed such reports, saying that it was impossible to liberalize oil
and gas prices when China was in a critical period of earthquake relief and
post-quake reconstruction.
The source said there were several reasons for why
the government will not end its grip on oil and gas prices, such as the need to
guarantee energy security in post-quake reconstruction and curbing inflation at
a time of quake relief and reconstruction.
Another source with the NDRC told the newspaper that
the government will absolutely take a risk to liberalize fuel prices in the near
future as China needs to reconstruct quake-hit regions under heavy inflation
pressure.
In addition, neither PetroChina nor Sinopec said on
Wednesday that it had received any notice on the liberalization of oil and gas
prices.
Over the last year or so, China has been faced with
mounting pressure on inflation.
China's consumer price index, the main gauge of
inflation, has risen from above three percent in March last year, to above 6
percent in August, and to 8.5 percent year-on-year last month, as a result of
the robust national economy and domestic food price rises coupled with soaring
international energy prices.
Also on Wednesday, crude oil prices shattered record
highs and soared above 133 U.S. dollars a barrel after a report showed an
unexpected drop in the U.S. crude stockpiles.
Light, sweet crude for July delivery rose 4.19
dollars to settled at 133.17 dollars a barrel on the New York Mercantile
Exchange (NYMEX), trading up 4.19 dollars, the largest one-day price advance
since March 26. But prices continued to rise as high as 133.82 dollars a barrel
in the after-hour electronic trading.
In London, Brent crude for July delivery rose 4.86
dollars to close at 132.70 a barrel.
On May 12, a 8.0-magnitude earthquake hit the
southwest Chinese province of Sichuan, leaving 41,353 people dead nationwide as
of noon of Wednesday. Another 274,683 were injured and 32,666 still missing.