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Peak oil: China’s crude demand set to fall as EV bets ease Hormuz fears

China now faces the challenge of persistent refining overcapacity as ongoing electrification slashes fuel demand, CNPC official says

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A tanker unloads imported crude oil at a terminal port in Qingdao, in eastern China’s Shandong province, on June 25. Photo: AFP
Judy Xue

China’s demand for crude oil is expected to peak in the coming years, a scenario set to further reshape the global energy market following the Strait of Hormuz crisis.

The shift was due to Beijing’s massive efforts to develop renewable energy while also revamping the country’s transport sector by becoming the world’s largest producer and user of electric vehicles.

China has been the biggest driver of global oil demand since the 2000s, but its demand will peak over the next five years as a result of the country’s electrification push, said Dai Jiaquan, chief economist of the CNPC Economics and Technology Research Institute, at an event in Hong Kong on Monday.

China now faced a different challenge at home: persistent refining overcapacity, said Dai. Domestic crude demand was estimated at 750 million to 800 million tonnes per year, compared with refining capacity of 900 million to 1 billion tonnes.

Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz had reshaped global supply and demand this year, pushing the market from an expected surplus into a supply deficit.

“Domestic refining capacity is undoubtedly excessive,” he said.

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