Despite slowing growth for diesel, the main industrial fuel, overall consumption of gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel in the world's top crude oil importer is expected to grow by 7% to 11% in 2021 to a record between 8.4 million and 8.9 million barrels per day, analysts at consultancy SIA Energy, IHS Markit and Energy Aspects estimated.

By comparison, the International Energy Agency (IEA) in March forecast China's demand for gasoline, jet fuel and diesel would rise by 6.5% to 8.2 million bpd in 2021.

China's strong growth in fuel use has helped stoke a 50% jump in global crude oil prices from 2020.

COVID CAUTION

The latest outbreaks of the COVID-19 Delta variant across 17 provinces are expected to constrain travel in the near term, but analysts say the overall growth trend remains intact.

Graphic: Chinese cities hit by new wave of locally transmitted COVID-19


cases since late July

"If fast containment can be achieved by mass testing, and future large-scale outbreaks can be avoided with the vaccination rollout, gasoline and jet will be still on track to hit a record," ISH Markit analyst Shi Fenglei said.

Gasoline demand, which accounts for a quarter of China's refined fuel use, is forecast to rise by 11% to 13% this year to a record 3.8 million to 4.1 million barrels per day, well above the IEA's March forecast of 3.5 million bpd.

Graphic: China car sales since 2005

"Gasoline leads the growth as people drive more for long-distance travel, (there are) more ride-hailing services and motorbike e-commerce deliveries," said Seng Yick Tee, senior director at SIA Energy.

New passenger vehicle sales are expected to rise 7% this year, marking China's first annual growth since 2017, said Tao Gao, light vehicle specialist with IHS Markit.

Graphic: China's passenger vehicle sales to post first annual growth in four years

Gasoline-guzzling sport utility vehicles continue to dominate new sales, making up nearly half the first half 2021 total, steady from last year, IHS data showed.

People are spending more on cars while cutting overseas travel as China's borders remain largely sealed to contain the coronavirus.

"Our car models are not the most trendy, but we're predicting annual sales to be a quarter above last year, as customers appear to have more to spend, now that they're unable to travel abroad," said an east China-based car dealer of General Motors Co's Cadillacs.

JETTING AWAY

Flight cancellations due to the latest COVID outbreaks will cut jet fuel demand for the next two weeks, but full-year aviation fuel demand is seen nearing or topping 2019 levels, at between 880,000 and 947,000 bpd in 2021, Energy Aspect's Liu Yuntao and FGE's Mia Geng estimated.


Graphic: China's air freight turnover rebounds further on booming trade

According to aviation data firm OAG, passenger seat capacity in China from February through July was 413 million, up 52% from the same period in 2020 and about 1 million more than in the same period in 2019.

G
raphic: China's domestic passenger air traffic exceeds pre-COVID levels

EXCAVATORS

Demand for diesel, which powers heavy machinery like excavators and trucks, is expected to rise just 1.7% from 2020 to 3.88 million bpd, FGE's Geng estimated.

Sales of excavators, a gauge for the mining and construction sectors, began to tumble in April and fell through June versus a year ago, while utilization also dropped, according to Chinese financial data group Wind.

Graphic: China's excavator sales

Even record first-half heavy-duty truck sales, another proxy for diesel use, did not boost fuel demand, said Cassie Liu of IHS Markit. Sales were driven more by aggressive marketing by vehicle dealers than trucking activity.


Graphic: China's excavator utilization hours drop in May & June


Graphic: China's H1 2021 heavy-duty truck sales hit record

(Additional reporting by Koustav Samanta in Singapore, Beijing newsroom; Editing by Shivani Singh, Gavin Maguire and Sonali Paul)

By Chen Aizhu and Muyu Xu