Special Report: Global Financial
Crisis
BEIJING, Jan. 13 -- The National Development and
Reform Commission has ruled out a further reduction in the prices of gasoline
and diesel, despite the fall in global crude prices.
The NDRC, which sets energy policy and fuel prices in
China, said it would not lower the December ceiling of retail oil products.
The watchdog said it would not be able to reduce
prices further as the current adjusted retailing prices are more or less on par
with the 80-90 U.S. dollars per barrel manufacturing cost after refining by
China's oil enterprises.
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A worker changes oil prices at a gas
station in Qingdao, a coastal city in east China's Shandong Province, Dec.
19, 2008.The National Development and Reform Commission has ruled out a
further reduction in the prices of gasoline and diesel, despite the fall
in global crude prices. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
"We have no plan to readjust the retailing prices as
the present prices are well reflected in the cost," an NDRC spokesman told China
Daily Monday.
In December, the commission had cut the retail price
of gasoline by 0.91 yuan per liter, and diesel by 1.08 yuan. The reduction in
retail prices followed a government announcement that it would cut factory gate
prices for gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, and also impose a fuel consumption tax
from Jan 1 onward.
The spokesman said the December price cut and ceiling
are based on the averaged cost of 80 dollars per barrel. "We found there is no
room for further retail price cuts at the national level," said the spokesman.
Han Xiaoping, senior analyst with China Energy Web,
however, has a different viewpoint. "We still have room for cuts as the current
crude prices are hovering around the 2003 and 2004 levels," said Han in a recent
interview.
At that time, China's averaged retail oil prices
stood at 4 yuan per liter while the averaged price now is around 5 yuan per
liter. "So we can still cut the price by a maximum of one yuan if the crude
prices are around 40 dollars per barrel," said Han.
The NDRC spokesman admitted that the growing
stockpiles, due to declining oil demand brought by economic recession, have
already forced retailing companies in many parts of China to reduce prices of
various grades of fuel.
In Zhejiang and Shanghai, the retailing prices have
been reduced to around 4.7 yuan per liter after many companies stopped
operations. In suburban Beijing also several filling stations have cut fuel
prices.
"The price cuts would spread to other filling
stations in Beijing also as the capital has huge stockpiles," said Guan Qingyou,
energy researcher, Tsinghua University.
The State-owned enterprise caretaker said PetroChina
and Sinopec are in dire straits due to the rising stockpiles and dwindling
demand.
Wang Xiaoqi, head of planning and development at the
State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission had earlier warned
that Sinopec could incur refining losses of around 230 billion in 2008, as it
cannot pass on the higher crude costs to consumers due to government curbs.
(Source: China Daily)
