China Daily

Nation’s demand for oil products to peak before ’25

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

The domestic demand for petroleum products may peak before 2025, amid China’s green energy transition, according to a think tank.

Oil demand is expected to rise in 2024 amid the nation’s economic recovery, while natural gas has emerged as a pivotal energy source to support the domestic energy transition, an industry report released by the China National Petroleum Corp Economics and Technology Research Institute in Beijing on Wednesday showed.

China’s petroleum consumptio­n touched a historic high last year and is expected to grow in 2024, thanks to domestic economic recovery, said Wang Lining, director of the Oil Market Research Department of the institute.

“With new productive forces — which refer to technologi­cal innovation, data, smart or intelligen­t technologi­es and the like — driving an overall increase in productivi­ty and enhancing new dynamics for economic growth, overall demand for petroleum is on an upward trajectory this year,” he said.

As China aims to realize the target of carbon peak and carbon neutrality before 2030 and 2060 respective­ly, the low-carbon transition in the transport sector will accelerate the peak for transport oil demand.

While oil will remain the main source of transporta­tion energy until 2035, with its share decreasing, consumptio­n will steadily decline after 2030 with the rapid substituti­on of transport oil by new energy vehicles. Total oil demand is expected to drop to 650 million metric tons in 2035.

The expansion of new energy vehicles in China has been gradually replacing gasoline demand. The growth rate of gasoline demand is expected to significan­tly slow down this year, with a yearon-year increase of around 1.3 percent to its peak, totaling about 165 million tons, while demand for refined oil products will also reach a peak of 400 million tons, a year-on-year growth of 0.3 percent, said Wang.

Energy supply in China remained ample and stable throughout last year, according to the report. Crude oil production was steadfast at 200 million tons throughout 2023, marking the sixth consecutiv­e year of growth. Natural gas production exceeded 230 billion cubic meters, demonstrat­ing a seven-year streak of annual increases surpassing 100 billion cubic meters, it said.

Petroleum consumptio­n surged to a historic peak of 756 million tons, an 11.5 percent year-on-year increase, while refined oil consumptio­n reached 399 million tons, up 9.5 percent compared with the same period of the previous year. Natural gas consumptio­n rebounded last year, reaching a yearly total of 391.7 billion cubic meters, up 6.6 percent year-on-year, it said.

According to Yuan Liuyan, director of the Energy Strategy Research Institute at the institute, the Asia-Pacific region continues to be a primary driver of global energy growth.

In 2023, energy consumptio­n in the Asia-Pacific region contribute­d to 72.6 percent of the global increment. Of this, China’s total energy consumptio­n reached 5.72 billion tons of standard coal, with a growth rate of 5.7 percent, reflecting a positive trend in China’s recovery, she said.

China stepped up oil and gas exploratio­n last year, investing 390 billion yuan, a 10 percent year-onyear increase. New geological reserves discovered included around 1.3 billion tons of oil and nearly 1 trillion cubic meters of natural gas, it said.

Despite a slowdown in the growth of domestic refining capacity, the petrochemi­cal production sector continued to expand last year, showcasing the further diversific­ation of market participan­ts. The total refining capacity reached 936 million tons per year, with refinery utilizatio­n rates standing at 79.1 percent, it said.

According to Wu Mouyuan, vicepresid­ent of the institute, the energy self-sufficienc­y rate in China continued to rise throughout last year, increasing to 85.6 percent, up 7.2 percentage points compared to that of 2016.

In 2023, the production of major domestic energy varieties maintained growth, with the total energy supply reaching around 4.89 billion tons of standard coal.

The robust support of energy supply has contribute­d significan­tly to economic recovery. The implementa­tion of economic stimulus policies and the rapid market recovery last year have driven the consumptio­n demand for energy such as petroleum and natural gas, he said. economic

With new productive forces ... driving an overall increase in productivi­ty and enhancing new dynamics for economic growth, overall demand for petroleum is on an upward trajectory this year.”

Wang Lining, director at the Oil Market Research Department, CNPC Economics and Technology Research Institute

 ?? SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Technician­s check pipelines at a gas station in Chuzhou, Anhui province, in February.
SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY Technician­s check pipelines at a gas station in Chuzhou, Anhui province, in February.

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