The nation's top economic planner has warned that oil-refining
facilities are stretched to the limit and urged that capacity be
increased.
The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) also suggested that prices
of refined-oil products, which are regulated by the government, be
raised.
"Low refined-oil prices and a fragile supply system are major
problems facing China's refining industry," the commission's
Industry Department said in a report.
It said the refineries of Sinopec and China National Petroleum
Corp (CNPC) the two major oil producers have pulled out all stops
but the country still needs an additional refining capacity of 17
million tons to meet demand.
Construction of refinery projects should he speeded up to
satisfy oil demand, which is expected to grow by about 6 percent
this year, the commission said.
"With more refineries, we can avoid an excessive load on
existing equipment and curb industrial accidents," it said.
The work safety situation in the oil industry is grave, with two
major accidents reported within a month in companies under the
umbrella of CNPC, the country's largest oil group.
Ten people were killed and nearly 40 injured in a gas pipeline
explosion on January 20 in Renshou County, Southwest China's
Sichuan Province. More than 1,800 residents were evacuated.
No casualties were reported at an oilfield explosion in the
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region on December 26.
Li Yizhong, minister of the State Administration of Work Safety,
said many companies in China have been neglecting work safety while
concentrating on production.
"The trend is evident not only in the coal mining sector but
also in the oil refining industry," said Li at a recent national
work safety meeting.
In a separate work safety report on the oil industry, the
commission said the losses caused by accidents last year at CNPC
rose 36 times over 2004.
The increase was mainly because of the November blast at a
chemical plant of CNPC's Jilin Petrochemical Corp, which spilled
100 tons of benzene pollutants into the Songhua River.
On oil prices, the commission said there is room for them to go
up.
It said China's oil refineries suffered a loss of 30 billion
yuan (US$3.75 billion) in 2005, and they need price hikes to cut
losses.
The government sets the prices of refined-oil products but the
authorities are considering a gradual reform so that they are
subject to market forces and in line with the global market.
The commission pointed out China's refined oil prices are lower
than the world market levels.
"The economic performance of refineries this year depends on a
policy adjustment on refined-oil prices," it said.
(China Daily February 14, 2006)