China raised diesel retail prices by 4 per cent to 4,509 yuan
(US$545) per ton yesterday in a bid to increase oil refiners'
profit margins.
Drivers of diesel-fuelled vehicles will have to pay an
additional 150 yuan (US$18) for every ton of fuel after yesterday's
price rise, but petrol prices will remain unchanged, said sources
from the National Development and Reform Commission.
The measure was taken to supplement the 8 per cent retail price
hike in petrol on March 23, and is "within expectations," according
to industry analysts.
"The country has chosen to adjust diesel prices after the
farming season, when the price increase has a relatively minor
impact on farming and deals only a slight blow to farmers'
interests," said Gong Jingshuang, a senior analyst with a research
institute under PetroChina, China's largest oil producer, in a
telephone interview.
The price increase was also driven by the high cost of crude oil
on the international market, which, although seeing a moderate
retreat recently, is still lingering at a high level, said Zhang
Jian, an analyst with Beijing-based China Securities.
Sinopec, Asia's largest oil refiner, increased the mean retail
diesel price by 150 yuan (US$18) per ton, said the oil giant's
website yesterday.
Its service stations can now charge users at the most 8 per cent
more than the mean rate, said Sinopec.
Beijing raised diesel retail prices by an average 0.15 yuan (1.8
US cents) per litre yesterday, while Shanghai's diesel retail price
rose by 0.18 yuan (2.2 US cents) per litre. In East China's Jiangsu
Province the retail diesel price witnessed a 0.13 yuan (1.6 US
cents) increase per litre.
The retail diesel price hike will have some impact on the
world's fastest-growing economy, but its influence will remain
moderate as the increase is only a slight one, according to
industry experts.
Major sectors affected will be agriculture, transportation and
heavy industries, which rely strongly on diesel fuel, said Zhang
from China Securities.
And some sectors such as logistics, farming activities and road
passenger transport will also suffer from the increased costs, said
industry analysts.
Li Xianfa, a driver who works for a long-distance haulage
company in Central China's Henan Province, said he will now have to
pay some 30 yuan (US$3.6) more every day to cover the price
hike.
The biggest beneficiaries will be the country's oil refiners,
who will begin to see slight profits after they failed to cover
production costs due to surging international oil prices and the
low price of finished oil in the domestic market, according to
Zhang.
One oil refiner under Sinopec in North China's Hebei Province
said the retail diesel price hike will be conducive to boosting
profits, but declined to give figures.
In foreign trade, diesel imports will increase, while exports
will be dampened by the price jump, said experts.
"But the impact is still a slight one," said PetroChina's Gong,
"as supply and demand is also a major factor affecting foreign
diesel trade."
The low price of diesel in the domestic market has made diesel
imports a marginal business.
China bought 145,000 tons of diesel from foreign countries in
the first quarter, down 63.7 per cent year-on-year.
"For the overall economy, the recent price increases in power
and diesel will likely trigger some degree of inflation if the
central government does not work out pertinent policies to rein in
the hefty fixed asset investment in some areas such as real
estate," warned Zhang.
Wang Xiaohui, an industry analyst with Beijing-based CITIC
Securities, projected that the country will take further measures
to curtail the investment spree in some sectors.
(China Daily May 11, 2005)