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Page added on October 31, 2007

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China fuel crisis spreads

BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s worst fuel crisis in two years spread to the capital and other inland areas by Wednesday, and one man was killed in a brawl at a petrol station queue, upping pressure on the government to intervene.

Diesel shortages in China’s political heart, which escaped previous supply crunches unscathed, highlight tensions between the government and its increasingly independent oil firms about who should pay for the country’s generous fuel subsidies.

Top refiner Sinopec on Wednesday pledged more supplies and bought additional diesel fuel abroad, but it may fall to Beijing to end the stand-off by raising domestic prices, easing taxes, promising another year-end pay-off — or simply strong-arming suppliers into selling more fuel at a loss.


“Sinopec will work hard to resolve the diesel supply tightness,” a headline in the company paper announced. Even so, at least five of its Beijing stations were rationing supplies.


At stake are profits for oil majors Sinopec and PetroChina from selling motor fuel in the world’s second-largest consumer, where pump prices have not been raised in 17 months even as crude costs hit a series of record highs.


In scenes reminiscent of the weeks-long shortages in summer 2005, also caused by the yawning gap between domestic prices and global crude costs, petrol stations across the country were turning away trucks and rationing supplies.


Reuters



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