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China Oil and Gas Market Update Oct 2013

Oil and Gas Market Update for covering entire month of September 2013

  • China Base Oil import has increase by 59% in July 2013 as compared to previous month imports.
    China to become world’s largest net oil importer
  • The US Energy Information Administration (EIA)’s August 2013 Shortterm energy outlook (STEO)
    projects that China’s net oil imports will exceed those of the US by October 2013 on a monthly basis and
    by 2014 on an annual basis, making China the largest importer of oil in the world. The imminent
    emergence of China as the world’s largest net oil importer has been driven by steady growth in Chinese
    demand, increased oil production in the US and a flat level of demand for oil in the US market.
  • Total US annual oil production is expected to rise by 28% between 2011 and 2014, to nearly
    13mn b/d, primarily from shale oil, tight oil and Gulf of Mexico deepwater plays. In the meantime,
    Chinese production increases at a much lower rate (6% over this period) and is forecast to be just a third
    of US production in 2014.
  • On the demand side, China’s liquid fuels use is expected to grow by 13% between 2011 and
    2014 to more than 11mn b/d, while US demand hovers close to 18.7mn b/d, well below the peak US
    consumption level of 20.8mn b/d in 2005.
  • Looking beyond 2014, higher US oil production and stagnant or declining US oil consumption,
    coupled with China’s projected strong oil demand growth and slow oil production growth, suggest that
    once China replaces the US as the world’s largest net oil importer, the gap between net oil imports in
    China and the US will grow.
  • There are several different ways to measure oil import dependence, reports the EIA.
    Discrepancies in the way dependence is assessed arise because oil is imported as crude oil but
    consumed as refined products, of which crude oil is the main but not only input. Net oil imports reflect
    the broadest measure of liquid fuels and include the following elements in the volumes of oil liquids
    produced and used within national borders: crude oil, lease condensates, natural gas liquids, biofuels,
    other liquids, and refinery processing gain, which in the US has been roughly 1mn b/d in recent years.
  • Another common (and narrower) measure of oil import dependence is the ratio of net imported
    crude oil to net crude oil inputs to refineries, comments the EIA. The US has emerged as a significant net
    exporter of petroleum products in recent years and a portion of US crude oil imports is used to produce
    products not consumed domestically. The advent of China as the world’s largest importer based on the
    narrower measure occurs on a different schedule than for the broader one, but the basic trends and
    drivers remain the same as for the broader measure. However, imports of crude oil alone do not
    automatically imply domestic dependence on foreign supplies, the EIA notes.