Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
Report projects 190-bln-USD trade surplus for 2007
China's listed companies recover 33.6 bln yuan of misappropriated funds
Rising temperatures threaten China's food output
ICBC launches foray into Indonesian banking
CITIC gets Kazakhstan oil assets for 1.91 bln USD
Foreign banks' share limit in Chinese banks remains at 25 pct
carve out  
Report projects 190-bln-USD trade surplus for 2007
Market-determined interest rate mechanism to start operation
China's foreign trade to top 1.75 trillion USD in 2006
China's A-share market growth tops world in 2006
More foreign-funded companies in Shanghai to set up trade unions in 2007
Shanghai Composite Index breaks 2,600-point mark
Resources  
E China province posts double-digit growth in per-capita GDP
China's shares hit record high for 6th straight day
China to maintain prudent monetary policy in 2007
China says tax revenues up 22 percent amid surging growth
Economists: China's saving deposits slow, domestic demand still uncertain
Value of RMB against USD finishes year on new high
 
China's refined oil price still lower than int'l market
BEIJING, Jan. 5 (Xinhua) -- Despite the recent slump in oil prices in the international market, the price of refined oil is still lower in China than elsewhere in the world.

Jiang Jiemin, general manager of the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), made the remark here Friday at a gathering of leaders of giant state-owned enterprises.

In December 2006, the domestic prices of gasoline and diesel oil were 5,200 yuan (667 U.S. dollars) per ton and 4,570 yuan per ton, while in Singapore prices were 5,509 yuan and 5,352 yuan respectively, Jiang said.

Government policy prevents the domestic price of refined oil from fluctuating in line with the international market, said Wang Tianpu, president of China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation (Sinopec), China's largest oil processor.

Wang claimed that the huge profits of Chinese petroleum giants in recent years were due to better internal management rather than the rocketing oil price.

Operating costs at Sinopec had decreased by 10 billion yuan annually, he said.

To ensure stable oil supplies in China, oil refineries suffered huge losses from pegged prices of refined oil while the international price soared, he said.

The CNPC hands over one third of its profit to the government as tax, Jiang said.

Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.