Off the wire
Xinhua Headlines: G20 ministerial meeting achieves consensus on multilateralism, global governance  • Xinhua summary of Asia-Pacific stocks news at 1100 GMT, May 23  • Security situation in war-torn Marawi more stable: Philippine military  • Philippines faces uphill struggles on evacuees' resettlement in Marawi city: ICRC  • 2nd Lead: Elie Ferzli elected Deputy Speaker of Lebanon's new parliament  • Latest figures on Irish farms released  • German teachers defend police intervention against truancy  • Germany's Hamburg to ban diesel cars from certain roads  • France's unemployment rate up to 8.9 pct in Q1: Insee  • Prosecutors considering charges against Bamf director in Germany's asylum scandal  
You are here:  

China to allow 11 non-state firms to import crude oil

Xinhua,May 24, 2018 Adjust font size:

BEIJING, May 23 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Commerce on Wednesday published the names of 11 private refineries with a plan to allow them to directly import crude oil.

The ministry said it has examined the firms' applications and found them in accordance with requirements.

The refineries are located in the provinces of Liaoning, Shaanxi, Shandong, Henan and Hubei.

China is one of the world's largest oil buyers. Over 60 percent of its oil comes from imports. Crude imports are dominated by state-run giants Sinopec, China National Petroleum Corporation and China National Offshore Oil Corporation.

The country gave private refineries the green light to directly import crude in 2015 as the government tried to attract private capital into the largely monopolized sector.

In 2018, the quota for non-state crude oil imports rose to 142 million tonnes, 55 percent higher than that for 2017.

Customs data showed China imported 420 million tonnes of crude oil in 2017, up 10.1 percent year on year. Enditem