PetroChina and Hengli outplay in China’s first state oil reserve auction: Prices to cool Off?
Hengli Petrochemical Co. Ltd. and Asia’s largest oil and natural gas producer as well as the subsidiary of China’s state-owned CNPC, PetroChina Co. Ltd. get possession of 60% of the total reserve oil offered in the first state auction held on September 24.
A total of 4.43 million
barrels of crude oil were sold to these two petrochemical majors in the first
phase of the auction conducted by the National Food and Strategic Reserves
Administration, which lasted only an hour. PetroChina bought a cargo each of 951,137
barrels of Qatar Marine and 1.1 million barrels of U.K. Forties crude that was
priced at USD 65 per barrel. On the other hand, Hengli procured a cargo of 1.79
million barrels of Oman at USD 65 per barrel and another cargo of 592,031
barrels of Upper Zakum crude at a price of USD 70.50 per barrel. However, no
bids were received for the sale of 2.95 million barrels of Murban crude, which
is the largest chunk of the offered reserves.
Crude oil Pricing is an unrefined
petroleum product that is obtained from reservoirs deep down the earth’s crust.
Crude oil fortifies the very foundation of modern living due to its myriad
applications in our day-to-day lives. It provides - fuel to the automobile
sector, energy for electricity generation that supports all the household and
industrial operations, and raw materials for the manufacture of industrially
important petrochemical products.
As reported earlier,
China had announced the public auction of state oil reserves earlier this month
following the 13-year record surge in the domestic crude oil prices that had
affected many businesses and plant operations.
As per ChemAnalyst database, crude oil
consumption in China reached over 14 million barrels in 2020. China being the
largest importer of crude oil saw a rise of 8% in its imports last month amid
the tight crude oil supplies and surging demand after recovering from the COVID19
impact. The release of the first batch of crude oil reserves may ease the
rising supply pressure in the downstream sectors. However, no significant
effect will be observed in the global crude
oil prices. The high dependence of China on oil imports could also lessen
the expected long-term relief in domestic crude oil prices.
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