Bangkok Post

Authoritie­s to drive ahead with oil plan

- YUTHANA PRAIWAN

Energy authoritie­s are continuing their push for the National Oil Plan, aiming to generate 170 billion baht for the Thai economy through a range of projects, including further developmen­t of cleaner energy, says the Department of Energy Business.

The plan has a budget of 34.9 billion baht and must pass a public hearing and approval by the cabinet, which is scheduled to be establishe­d in early August if the process goes smoothly.

After approval, authoritie­s have until 2026 to carry out projects under the plan, which will focus on preparing enough oil reserves for energy security and a shift towards cleaner energy, said Nanthika Thangsupan­ich, director-general of the department.

The plan promotes the use of biofuel for aircraft, also known as sustainabl­e aviation fuel, as well as increasing the amount of biofuel mixed with gasoline and diesel, and support for batteryrun vehicles.

Transporti­ng oil through a network of pipelines is another focus. Fuel consumptio­n in Thailand rose by 3.1% during the first four months of 2023 thanks to the domestic economic recovery, said Ms Nanthika.

The consumptio­n of refined oil products, including gasoline, jet fuel, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), compressed natural gas (CNG) and fuel oil, tallied 159 million litres per day (MLD), up from 154 MLD in the same period last year and exceeding 2019 levels.

Thailand used 158 MLD in 2019 before the pandemic subdued economic activities in 2020 and reduced fuel demand.

The Prayut Chan-o-cha government began to fully reopen the country in July last year when the pandemic eased, leading to more consumptio­n of fuels.

From January to April, demand for gasoline and gasohol, a mix of gasoline and ethanol, rose by 5.8% to 31.8 MLD, up from 30.1 MLD year-on-year, according to the department.

Jet fuel posted the highest growth, with consumptio­n soaring by 88.9% to 14.1 MLD, up from 7.5 MLD during the first four months of last year.

Demand for diesel dropped by 3.4% to 74.6 MLD, from 77.2 MLD in the same period last year.

The plan will focus on preparing enough oil reserves for energy security and a shift towards cleaner energy. NaNthiKa thaNgsuPaN­ich Director-general, Department of Energy Business

Consumptio­n of CNG rose by 6.4% to 3,500 tonnes per day, up from 3,290 tonnes per day, while demand for fuel oil increased by 2.6% to 6.4 MLD, rising from 6.2 MLD.

LPG consumptio­n decreased by 3.3% to 31.8 MLD, down from 32.9 MLD.

The department said earlier the decline in LPG usage resulted from low polymer prices in the petrochemi­cal sector.

Between January and April, imports of crude oil, refined oil and LPG increased by 7.9% to 1.098 million barrels per day (BPD), up from 1.018 million BPD in the same period last year.

The export of refined oil declined by 2.6% to 151,539 BPD, down from 155,522 BPD in the first four months of 2022.

Ms Nanthika said more fuel consumptio­n reflected GDP growth as fuel demand and economic growth usually follow a similar path.

 ?? CHANAT KATANYU ?? Motorcycle­s and cars queue at a PTT petrol station in Bangkok. Fuel consumptio­n in Thailand rose by 3.1% during the first four months of 2023, attributed to the domestic economic recovery.
CHANAT KATANYU Motorcycle­s and cars queue at a PTT petrol station in Bangkok. Fuel consumptio­n in Thailand rose by 3.1% during the first four months of 2023, attributed to the domestic economic recovery.

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