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Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews. 

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Can Rising Jet Fuel Demand Save China’s Oil Consumption Growth?

  • China's jet fuel demand has surged as airline traffic recovers from the pandemic, providing a much-needed boost to the country's refining sector.
  • Despite the strong growth in jet fuel demand, overall oil demand in China remains weak due to a slowing economy and lower consumption of gasoline and diesel.
  • The rebound in jet fuel demand has helped to offset some of the weakness in other fuel segments, but it is not enough to reverse the overall bearish trend in China's oil market.

A rebound in China’s airline traffic this year has boosted jet fuel demand in the only bright spot in transportation fuel consumption in the world’s top crude oil importer.

Chinese refiners, which have seen depressed refining margins for producing gasoline and diesel amid weak demand, are now cranking up jet fuel output to seize the higher margins in this segment as demand jumps by double digits.

Airline passenger and flight numbers are soaring this year compared to 2023 after nearly three years of Covid-related lockdowns were removed early last year.

As a result jet fuel demand is rebounding. But as a share of China’s total fuel consumption, jet fuel is much smaller than the shares of gasoline and diesel.

Rising jet fuel could offset some of the weakness in road transportation fuels, but not single-handedly lift Chinese oil consumption out of its currently tepid-demand period.

“Double-digit growth in jet fuel consumption this year may be able to narrow the plunge in gasoline and diesel,” Amy Sun, a consultant at GL Consulting, a think-tank under data provider Mysteel, told Bloomberg.

“But given its small market share, it can hardly reverse the bearishness in overall margins as fuel displacement accelerates amid a softer economy.”

Faltering overall oil demand and lower crude imports in China result from weaker economic growth and lackluster fuel demand below expectations.

The property crisis and weaker-than-expected fuel demand have weighed on refining margins in recent months, prompting independent Chinese refiners to reduce crude throughput.

China imported 9.97 million barrels of oil daily on average last month, which was 12% lower than the June figure and 3% lower than the daily import average for July 2023.

The apparent weaker demand and the slowing imports in China have been the biggest drags on oil prices in recent months, often overshadowing tensions in the Middle East and a recent drop in commercial crude inventories in the United States.

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By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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Leave a comment
  • Mamdouh Salameh on August 08 2024 said:
    It makes not a jot of difference how China uses its imported crude as long as it remains the driver of global oil demand.

    There is no definite proof that China's crude imports are declining except from Reuters reporting which is normally attributed to undisclosed sources. China's imports are dictated by its needs and the time it needs the crude. Therefore, it isn't surprising for instance to see variations in the volumes of the imported crude from month to month.

    And while China's economy continues to grow this year at 5%, Western disinformation media continues to focus on so-called slowdown in the Chinese economy with hardly any whimper or whisper about the United States' economy which is facing the possibility of recession this year.

    Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
    International Oil Economist
    Global Energy Expert

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