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Sources say that China's first batch fuel export quotas for 2026 are stable year-on-year.

Sources say that China's first batch fuel export quotas for 2026 are stable year-on-year.
Sources say that China's first batch fuel export quotas for 2026 are stable year-on-year.

Three sources familiar with this matter late Wednesday said that China issued 19 million tonnes of export quotas, including gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, in the first batch for 2026.

In this batch of export quotas, the world's second largest consumer of oil gave out?8 millions tons of low sulphur marine fuel.

Both volumes were stable compared to a year ago.

China's refined fuel exports are managed by a quota-based system that balances the fundamentals of supply and demand in its domestic market.

The main recipients of the quotas were the state-owned oil companies Sinopec and CNPC. They received 13.76 millions tons of allowances for gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel exports – more than 70% of the total volume.

Zhejiang Petrochemical, a major private refiner, was allocated 1.56 million tonnes?of export quotas in this first batch.

Almost 85% of the 8 million tons of low-sulphur fuel allowed for marine use went to Sinopec and CNPC.

China's oil refinery exports, including aviation fuel, marine bunker fuel, and diesel fuel, totaled 52.65 millions tons in the first 11 months 2025. This is a 3.2% decrease from last year.

(source: Reuters)