Oman Daily Observer

Dark clouds loom for oil as China chases blue skies

- SERENE CHEONG, BEN SHARPLES AND DAN MURTAUGH

China is throwing the world’s leaders a party, and oil bulls may be hit with the hangover. Authoritie­s in the Asian nation have ordered hundreds of factories to curb activity ahead of the Group of 20 summit in Hangzhou in early September, in a bid to ensure blue skies when the red carpet is rolled out.

The curtailmen­ts, along with flooding earlier this summer, may cut petroleum demand in the world’s second-biggest oil consumer by 250,000 barrels a day in the third quarter, according to industry consultant Energy Aspects Ltd.

The slowdown at facilities including refineries and petrochemi­cal plants along the Yangtze River threatens to weaken Chinese oil imports that rose to record highs in the first half of the year, at some times exceeding even those of the US.

Those unpreceden­ted purchases, along with supply disruption­s, helped crude rally about 80 per cent from a 12-year low earlier in 2016, and any sustained recovery will hinge on continued strong demand from the world’s biggest energy consumer.

“There is a weather and policy induced slowdown in China,” said Michal Meidan, an analyst at Energy Aspects. “While the floods seemed to have died down, we are entering a period ahead of the G-20 when there is going to be industrial curtailmen­t. Chinese demand is certainly going to be weak.”

President Xi Jinping is expected to showcase his nation’s strengths at the G-20 summit, which will host leaders of countries that account for two-thirds of the world’s population and 85 per cent of its economic output.

They are gathering at a time of slowing trade and tepid global growth. China’s recent stabilisat­ion faltered in July as private businesses remain reluctant to invest and authoritie­s seek to curb financial risks and cut excess capacity.

China has a history of enacting temporary environmen­tal measures to clean the air before hosting major events, which have affected commodity prices. Before the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, small coal mines in the northern provinces of Shanxi and Hebei were ordered to shut. That exacerbate­d a supply shortage of the fuel, sending local prices to a record ahead of the Games.

Iron ore prices slumped in 2014 when the Chinese government ordered some steel mills in the world’s largest buyer to suspend production before the AsiaPacifi­c Economic Cooperatio­n meeting in Beijing. They again tumbled last year ahead of closures before the world track and field championsh­ips and a parade to mark the 70th anniversar­y of Japan’s surrender in World War II. Unpreceden­ted Scale “The rationale is that you have to shut down in order to achieve absolutely clean air,” Salmon Aidan Lee, a Singaporeb­ased consultant at Wood Mackenzie Ltd, said by phone.

“Shutdowns have happened before during Apec meetings in Beijing and the Olympic Games many years ago. What is unpreceden­ted is the scale or magnitude of this shutdown.”

For G-20, Shanghai, which is 180 kilometres northeast of Hangzhou, has asked 255 companies, including coal power plants and oil refineries, to curb output from August 24 to September 6, according to a statement on the website of the city’s Environmen­tal Protection Bureau. Officials in Ningbo, about 150 kilometres east of Hangzhou, proposed cuts or closures at 445 companies, including petrochemi­cal plants, and producers of steel, cement and paper.

In spite of the planned curbs, some analysts remain optimistic that China’s overall oil use could rise in the third quarter, compared with the prior three months. The nation’s demand may rise 250,000 barrels a day from the period before, backed by more industrial activity before the G-20 event, according to Yao Li, an analyst at SIA Energy, a Beijing-based industry consultant. Raging Waters Still, the planned shutdowns for the G-20 meeting could exacerbate the effect from flooding last month. Raging waters across 11 Chinese provinces that account for more than a third of the country’s fuel use wreaked havoc on oil-product and gas pipelines, and may have reduced demand by about 100,000 barrels a day, according to Barclays Plc.

China’s total oil demand is estimated at 11.64 million barrels a day in 2016, making it the second-largest user after the US, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

Consumptio­n is expected to grow by 200,000 barrels a day from the year earlier, accounting for about 14 per cent of global expansion, data from the Paris-based IEA show. The Asian nation’s crude imports fell to the lowest level in six months in July, according to data from the General Administra­tion of Customs. It received shipments from overseas at a rate of about 7.35 million barrels a day, the slowest pace since January. Vulnerable Prices Crude prices remain vulnerable. They entered a bull market last week, but that was less than three weeks after tumbling into a bear market amid concern that a global supply glut is persisting. While there’s speculatio­n that informal Opec talks next month may lead to action to stabilise the market and producers including Russia may discuss an output freeze, a similar plan proposed earlier this year didn’t end in an accord.

Brent crude, the benchmark for more than half the world’s oil, traded at $48.93 a barrel at 8:04 am London time on the ICE Futures Europe exchange. While futures are up about 30 per cent in 2016, they are still more than 50 per cent lower than mid-2014 levels.

The slowdown at facilities including refineries and petrochemi­cal plants along the Yangtze River threatens to weaken Chinese oil imports that rose to record highs in the first half of the year, at some times exceeding the US

 ?? — Reuters ?? A man exercises in the morning as he faces chimneys emitting smoke behind buildings across the Songhua River in Jilin, China, in this file photo.
— Reuters A man exercises in the morning as he faces chimneys emitting smoke behind buildings across the Songhua River in Jilin, China, in this file photo.

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