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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 with knowledge of the matter late Wednesday said that China had issued 19 million tons of export allowances, including gasoline, jet fuel, diesel, and other refined fuels.

They said that the world's second largest consumer of oil, China, also distributed 8 million tons of low sulphur marine fuel export "quotas" in this batch.

Both volumes were stable compared to a year ago.

China uses a quota system to manage its refined fuel exports. This is done in order to balance supply and demand fundamentals on its domestic market.

The Commerce Ministry did not immediately respond to a faxed request for comments.

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

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

The 19 million tons total of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel export quotas were used for the processing trade. 6.6 million tonnes of this amount was for aviation fuel bunkering.

Almost 85% of the 8,000,000 tons of low-sulphur'marine fuel' allocated to Sinopec CNPC.

China's first 11 months 2025 saw its exports of refined petroleum products, including gasoline, diesel, aviation and marine bunker, total 52.65 millions tons, a 3.2% drop on the previous year.

(source: Reuters)