Oil imports hit alarming level in China
China's crude oil dependency reached alarming levels last year with more than half of the country's total oil
consumption coming from abroad, latest official statistics show.
Figures from the General Administration of Customs show imported oil in December hit a record 21.3 mm tons, pushing
the country's total oil imports last year to 204 mm tons. Imported crude oil accounted for 52 % of the country's
total oil consumption last year, experts said. Importing more than 50 % is a globally recognized energy security
alert level.
China produced about 190 mm tons of oil in 2009.
"This year we will control the amount of imported oil and accelerate the exploration of domestic oil and natural
gas," Zhang Hongtao, chief geologist with the Ministry of Land and Resources, told. Due to the country's fast
economic development, increased oil imports will continue for a long time and stepping up the exploration and
development of natural gas as substitute energy is very urgent, he said.
Analysts believe that by 2020, nearly 65 % of the oil consumed in China will have to be imported. China's oil
dependency reached 45 % in 2006 and grew at 2 % every year after that. The country first became a net importer of
crude oil in 1993.
The oil industry challenges the country's energy security, some energy experts said. Lin Boqiang, director of the
research centre of China energy economics at Xiamen University, told that as a fresh player in the international oil
market, China has acted only as the buyer not the seller and the surging oil price means constantly losing money.
Letting domestic oil companies explore and refine oil is a good way to help China establish its role as a seller in
the international oil market, he added.
"An effective way to avoid China's oil dependency is to change the domestic energy consumption pattern and to
encourage the development and use of electric vehicles, because about 60 % of the oil consumption is for vehicles,"
Lin said.
China is not the only major country that has passed the 50 % energy security alert level -- Japan and South Korea
import more than 90 % of their crude oil, while the United States imports more than 60 % of its crude oil
needs.
Wang Zhen, director of the China research centre for strategic energy under China University of Petroleum, told China
Business News that numbers are important but we should pay more attention to how to increase the efficiency of energy
consumption.
