Houston Community News >> Asian Drivers Paying 50 Dollars a Barrel
8/2/2007 BEIJING/NEW DELHI-- As
US crude oil prices hit new highs near $80, traders have little reason to fear a
slowdown in use from China, India and the Middle East, where cheap fuel is
driving half the world’s demand growth.
Analysts are on high alert for signs of reduced oil demand that could crimp the
market’s rally, but can rest assured that the domestic subsidies that have
shielded many Asian drivers are in little danger of being swept away soon.
With Chinese inflation at its highest in almost three years and Middle East
nations anxious to avoid any risk of domestic unrest, policy makers will remain
keen to keep fuel prices low by global standards, analysts and officials say.
State-run refiners such as Indian Oil Corp and China’s Sinopec may convince
their owners to nudge prices higher this month, but history has shown that
modest increments are largely ineffective in deterring demand growth in
economies growing at near or above double-digit rates.
“Their demand is even more inelastic than in developed countries,” says Yong-hun
Jung of the Asia-Pacific Energy Research Centre. “Once you own a car in a place
without well-developed mass transit, you don’t really switch.”
Reckoning China and India’s price rises against crude in early 2003, the start
of a five-year rally, motorists are paying the equivalent of about $50 oil — not
cheap, but a far cry from the $78.77 a barrel record high for US crude on
Wednesday.
Drivers in Saudi Arabia are paying less than they did several years ago, as many
Gulf producers use their growing petro-dollar revenues to keep pump rates among
the world’s cheapest, wary of risking public ire at a time of instability in
Iraq.
Installed to help maintain social harmony at a time of economic transformation,
the regulated price policies also mute the need for conservation on the part of
consumers, allowing demand to grow unfettered, and driving global prices higher.
Oil demand in China, India and the Middle East has risen by more than 4 million
barrels per day (bpd) since 2002, more than half the world’s total growth, and
should expand by another 790,000 bpd this year, the International Energy Agency
said.
China conundrum: Some industrialized nations like the United States have also
been surprisingly immune to any price-induced slowdown in consumption, although
the world’s number-three user Japan is into its second year of shrinking
gasoline demand. “Because so many people live within ready access to trains,
they’re quitting their cars,” says Mizuho Securities Co Ltd analyst Hidetoshi
Shioda. “Gasoline consumption will be really hurt this summer.”
Not so in China, where a new car is sold every four seconds and retail gasoline
prices are only 54 percent higher than at the start of 2003, and about 11
percent higher than mid-2005.
By contrast, the monthly average price of US crude in July was 127 percent
higher than January 2003 and up 26 percent from two years ago.
“With personal income growing and profits for most enterprises strong... little
impact on demand itself is expected from higher oil prices,” said Gong Jinshuang,
a researcher with a think tank run by the China National Petroleum Corp.
Beijing’s last increase was a 10-11 percent move in May 2006, it’s biggest
one-off rise to date, although in January it bowed to popular pressure and cut
gasoline rates by 3.8 percent.
Refiners who shoulder the burden of higher crude costs are agitating for another
increase to staunch their losses, although some analysts say it is unlikely they
will attempt to force their point by reducing the sale of domestic gasoline and
diesel, as they did in mid-2005, causing consumption to fall.
To minimize that risk, Beijing gave top refiner Sinopec a $1.2 billion rebate in
late 2005 and another $640 million the following year to keep it in line with
the state’s aims.
“Sinopec’s first goal is social responsibility, not profit,” said an analyst
attached to the company’s research division. Consumer inflation that hit a
33-month high of 4.4 percent in June, sparking a third interest rate rise, may
also stay Beijing’s hand from any significant price hikes. Inflation of around
4.4 percent in India is less of a concern, although the government’s fragile
grip on power may make it reluctant to make any sudden or significant changes.
India last raised prices in June 2006 before cutting them back in November and
February. Diesel prices are up 33 percent since mid-2004 while gasoline has been
raised by only 20 percent. Average crude price is up 82 percent.
“Demand for oil products in our country is inelastic, it will not come down,”
says Amitendu Palit, an economist with the Indian Council for Research on
International Economic Relations. “In fact we are becoming more energy intensive
as we are growing more at over 9 percent.
(Contributed by Reuters)