China Daily

Report: Petrochemi­cal sector rebounds

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s petrochemi­cal sector showed signs of stability and recovery last year despite rising global uncertaint­ies, an industry report showed.

Its output, together with the trade volume of petrochemi­cal products, rose in 2023 amid an intricate landscape, laying the groundwork for robust prospects in 2025, said Fu Xiangsheng, vicepresid­ent of the China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Associatio­n, during a news conference in Beijing on Thursday.

The sector has contribute­d substantia­lly to both domestic energy security as well as food security, with increased output of refined oil products, fertilizer­s and pesticides, he said.

According to the associatio­n, exports of refined oil products, including gasoline and diesel, rebounded strongly after three years of decline, with a total export volume of 41.98 million metric tons in 2023, a 21.9 percent increase year-on-year.

National fertilizer exports reached 31.46 million tons, up 27.2 percent year-on-year, while pesticide exports amounted to 2.46 million tons, up 9.7 percent year-onyear, it said.

After two consecutiv­e years of decline, China’s crude oil imports rapidly rebounded last year, reaching 564 million tons, up 11 percent year-on-year, it said.

Petrochemi­cal product output also witnessed rapid recovery, with the output of refined oil products reaching 428 million tons, an increase of 16.5 percent year-onyear, surpassing the previous year’s growth rate by 13.3 percentage points.

The total production of major chemicals, including ethylene, sulfuric acid, and fertilizer­s, turned positive last year, growing by about 6 percent year-on-year to 720 million tons, according to data from the associatio­n.

Despite the growth in output as well as import and export volume, Fu stressed the need for increased production efficiency to improve profits, highlighti­ng the sector’s potential for further improvemen­t.

While profits in the petrochemi­cal sector have not kept pace with production last year, there is considerab­le space and potential for improving efficiency, said Fu.

China is on course to becoming a petrochemi­cal heavyweigh­t, he said.

While energy and chemical enterprise­s are making new contributi­ons to ensure energy security amid global uncertaint­ies and conflicts, concerns about severe overcapaci­ty still persist, said Lin Boqiang, head of the China Institute for Studies in Energy Policy at Xiamen University.

China is already grappling with distillati­on overcapaci­ty, and it is necessary for the industry to prioritize structural optimizati­on and increased investment­s in high-end developmen­t rather than solely focusing on expanding scale, said Lin.

Fu also said that the severity of overcapaci­ty must be duly acknowledg­ed.

“A significan­t influx of investment­s has geared toward expanding scale and increasing output in the past few years, with limited proportion of these investment­s allocated to structural optimizati­on and highend advancemen­ts,” he said.

“This disproport­ionate focus on sheer scale has resulted in the overcapaci­ty situation to some extent, underscori­ng the necessity for a reevaluati­on of strategies to achieve a more balanced and sustainabl­e industry landscape.”

On the other hand, overcapaci­ty, together with weak demand for commodity chemicals and China’s rapidly growing industries like solar and electric vehicles, are also the key drivers for companies to extend into high-end, high performing materials, said Kelly Cui, Shanghai-based principal analyst with consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

Chinese oil refiners and petrochemi­cal companies, including State-owned oil giant China Petroleum and Chemical Corp, or Sinopec, are already investing to produce high-end chemicals for solar panels and lithium-ion batteries, eyeing greater market share from the growing demand for energy transition technologi­es.

With an emphasis on high-quality developmen­t, green and low-carbon transforma­tion, and digital upgrades, the associatio­n anticipate­s the overall situation of the petroleum and chemical industry to relatively improve in the first half of this year, compared to the same period in 2022.

According to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, the global petrochemi­cal industry, essential to the production of clothing, tires, detergents, fertilizer­s, and countless other everyday products, is currently undergoing a momentous period of transition.

 ?? LIU WENHUA / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? An employee checks gas storage facilities in Manzhouli, Inner Mongolia autonomous region.
LIU WENHUA / CHINA NEWS SERVICE An employee checks gas storage facilities in Manzhouli, Inner Mongolia autonomous region.

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