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Sinopec refinery usage drops but chemical exports increase due to the Iran war

Sinopec, a Chinese company, said that its refinery and petrochemical utilization rates fell in the first quarter due to the U.S./Israeli war on Iran which disrupted the feedstock supply. However its chemical exports will grow strongly this year.

Sinopec is the world's largest refiner by capacity. The company announced that it had cut refinery utilisation by 7.6 percentages points annually between January and the end of March, to an average of around 83%.

A company executive said that the ethylene usage rate was 89% for the first quarter of this year, which is 1.5 percentage points less than it was a year ago.

The War on Iran that began on February 28 has resulted in weeks of near-full closing of the?Hormuz Strait. Through this strait about 20% of world oil and gas flow. This has disrupted crude oil and petrochemicals supplies to many Asian refiners.

The conflict has also provided an opportunity for the giant refiner to increase its exports of chemical products. It expects that they will rise by 26%, to 3,65 million tons, in 2026.

Sinopec, which has been working to restore refinery margins and cover a gap in crude oil supply, has sought government support for tapping into commercial oil reserves. The company has also obtained a full year government quota on refined fuel exports.

In the first quarter of this year, it exported 4,32 million tons (including 3,82 million tons) of jet fuel. The war has boosted its Asian refining margins.

China banned fuel exports to protect domestic fuel supplies in March. The restriction was then extended through April. The restriction did not apply to exports to Hong Kong or Macau, aviation fuel refuelling flights for international travel, and bunker sales by shippers for international voyages.

Sinopec predicted that China's ethylene consumption would increase 2.7% by 2026.

Sinopec’s first-quarter LNG import business suffered a loss of 830 million Yuan ($121.46) due to lower supplies under term contracts, and higher spot imports.

Sinopec has a long-term contract with Qatar to buy LNG, but the war damaged Qatar's gas production facilities.

(source: Reuters)