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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business -> 
Jet fuel demand back to near pre-COVID levels
    2020-10-29  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

CHINA’S domestic aviation fuel consumption rebounded to near pre-COVID levels in September, thanks to a fast recovery in passenger travel and cargo freight, although demand from international flights remained weak, industry sources said.

Domestic aviation fuel sales amounted to about 2 million tons (523,300 barrels per day) last month, the highest since February and slightly below January, Reuters quoted two sources with knowledge of the matter as saying yesterday.

Domestic flights account for roughly two-thirds of China’s overall consumption of the aviation fuel. The rebound in jet fuel demand has improved Chinese refiners’ margins and enabled them to process more crude.

From late October through March, domestic consumption will receive a further lift as China adds more flights to the seasonal winter/spring air traffic planning.

Between Oct. 25 and March 27, Chinese airlines will fly 84,634 domestic flights a week, 19.8 percent more than the year-ago level, while weekly cargo flights will rise nearly 40 percent to 2,101, the Civil Aviation Administration of China said last week.

“Domestic passenger travel recovered to just 2 percent under the year-ago level and freight volume is also improving month on month,” said Liu Yuntao, an analyst with consultancy Energy Aspect.

China’s apparent jet fuel demand posted its first year-on-year growth this year at 2 percent in September at 920,000 bpd, Liu said, who estimated by adding domestic output to net imports but excluding inventory changes that was not reported.

However, with international flights at less than 5 percent of 2019 volume due to tight border controls, a full recovery to the 2019 level would take years, said a Beijing-based official with China National Aviation Fuel Corp. (CNAF).

The lackluster demand from international flights was reflected in China’s jet kerosene exports data, which covers jet fuel cargo exports and refueling of airlines plying international routes.

September exports sank to a multi-year low and exports between January and September fell 31 percent year on year.

“China’s overall jet fuel consumption could at best resume 75 percent to 80 percent of 2019’s level this year, and may take five years to fully recover,” said the CNAF official who declined to be named.

China consumed a record of about 38.7 million tons of jet fuel last year.(SD-Agencies)

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