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China
acts to secure oil reserves amid record crude prices
By
Perrine Faye
AFP
LONDON
Petroleumworld.com
04 25 06
Beijing's desire for a Saudi-fed strategic oil reserve in China underlines
the Asian nation's drive to secure crude supplies amid rocketing energy
prices, analysts here said on Monday.
However, they added that any deal between the two nations was unlikely
to put pressure on global crude inventories.
Chinese President Hu Jintao discussed a proposal to set up an oil stockpile
in China during a weekend visit to Saudi Arabia, a Chinese official
said Sunday.
China plans to fill the first of its strategic oil reserve facilities
by the year end, a senior planning official said in March, adding that
three other reserves would be ready in 2007-2008.
China had planned to begin accumulating oil reserves, which are to be
used in the event of an emergency, last year.
However with oil prices soaring to record high points -- New York crude
matched its record high of 75.35 dollars per barrel on Monday -- China
has been forced to delay its plan by almost two years.
China knows it cannot delay for ever with its energy demand accelerating
owing to the country's economic boom. Consumption of oil in China is
forecast to jump 6.0 percent this year after consumption of 6.4 million
barrels per day in 2005.
"The Chinese authorities are quite familiar with how their domestic
production is being outstripped by demand, and that there's always going
to be a measure of vulnerability and reliance on foreign production,"
Global Insight analyst Steven Knell said.
"Having strategic reserves creates a buffer that will allow them
to mitigate some of the sharper consequences of that reliance should
there be any disruption of supply," he added.
The China-Saudi plan was raised during Hu's talks with King Abdullah
on Saturday and both sides want to see it through, the Chinese official
told AFP, requesting anonymity.
The reserve would be on top of the oil supplies Saudi Arabia exports
to China for its daily needs.
Saudi Arabia is the world's biggest exporter of crude oil and the biggest
supplier to China, which imports about 15 percent of its oil from the
Arab nation.
Knell said he believed such a tie-up between the two countries would
unlikely hurt major oil consumers such as the United States and Europe.
"Given the volume of this facility, I don't think it's going to
make such a difference.
It will come as a separate delivery, on top of the current demand, but
the scale will not result in major shortages elsewhere or compromise
other deliveries," he said.
"The most profound impact will be on the Chinese domestic market.
This is another contribution to the reserve capacity that they've thought
for some time and they've actually been vulnerable for so long that
this makes a very positive step for the stability of their energy balance."
According to the Chinese spokesman, the reserve would be set up in a
coastal city in southeast China.
The official did not say how much oil would eventually be stockpiled.
But he said Riyadh and Beijing were discussing the feasibility of the
plan and ways of cooperating to carry it out.
Calyon analyst Mike Wittner doubted also that there would be any major
impact on global supplies, and therefore prices.
"I don't think it has any significance for the short-term market,
and perhaps not even for the longer term," he said.
"Saudi Arabia is already a large and growing supplier of Chinese
crude oil imports, and this is a logical development and a logical extension
of that trend," he said
AFP 04 24 06 1731 GMT
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© 1999-2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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