China will open its petroleum and refined
oil market by the end of next year in compliance with commitments
made when it entered the World Trade Organization, a commerce
chamber representative was quoted by the China News Service
as saying.
Gong Jialong, president of the Petroleum
Chamber of Commerce, affiliated to the All-China Federation
of Industry and Commerce, made the remark here Wednesday
at a high-level seminar on energy strategy.
At that time, international petroleum giants
will enter the Chinese market, and the country's oil prices
will fluctuate on the basis of market supply and demand,
Gong said.
China's oil prices are still controlled
by the government, partly adjusted according to the fluctuation
of international oil prices.
Currently, the domestic refined oil price
per ton is about 1, 000 yuan (about 120 US dollars) lower
than the international price, Director Zhou Dadi of the
Energy Research Institute of the State Development and Reform
Commission (SDRC) was quoted by the China News Service as
saying.
If China's oil price fluctuation is exactly
in line with that of the international market, that will
affect China's economic growth, said Zhou.
The SDRC decided to cut the price of gasoline
by 150 yuan per ton beginning Tuesday. The price cuts are
a response to price fluctuations in global oil markets,
a SDRC notice said.
Source:Xinhua