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Sinopec net profit slumps 21.6 percent in first half

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BEIJING: China Petroleum and Chemical Corporatio­n, or Sinopec Corp, said its net profit fell 21.6 percent in the first half of 2016, hurt by a steep decline in internatio­nal oil prices.

The state-controlled energy firm, Asia’s largest refiner, said in a separate statement that Dai Houliang had replaced Li Chunguang as company president and become vice chairman of the board. It said Chunguang had resigned due to his age.

During the first six months of the year, Sinopec posted a net profit of 19.9 billion yuan ($2.98 billion), down from 25.4 billion yuan a year earlier.

Sinopec’s peers PetroChina and CNOOC Ltd. , both heavy on upstream oil and gas production, were hit badly by falls in crude oil and natural gas prices. Sinopec’s operating income in the first half was 35.1 billion yuan, according to IFRS accounting standard, 13.3 percent lower than a year ago.

The refiner said its oil and gas output fell 6 percent in the first six months on-year, with crude oil production down 11.4 percent, as it was forced to cut output at loss-making fields. While fuel demand growth in China, the world’s second-largest consumer, moderated along with the broader economy, domestic competitio­n heated up after more than a dozen independen­t refineries were allowed to import crude oil for the first time since late 2015.

As these independen­ts boosted refinery throughput, state majors came under pressure to reduce operations. Sinopec said its first-half refinery operations fell 2.51 percent on-year. The firm, however, boosted total domestic refined fuel sales by 3.1 percent.

“China’s economic growth is expected to be steady in the second half of 2016, which will drive the growth of domestic demand for refined oil products and petrochemi­cal products,” the company said in a statement,

It added, however, that over-supply in the internatio­nal oil market is likely to persist and internatio­nal oil prices will remain low.

“The consumptio­n mix of oil products shall continue to change, and demand for chemical products shall be gradually going for more high-end products,” the company said.

 ??  ?? Cars wait to take on fuel at a Sinopec gas station in Beijing, China. (Reuters)
Cars wait to take on fuel at a Sinopec gas station in Beijing, China. (Reuters)

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