设计理念 一句话:Another oil price hike to curtail car sales -...

来源:百度文库 编辑:九乡新闻网 时间:2024/04/28 07:03:26

Another oil price hike to curtail car sales

08:50, April 07, 2011      

Email | Print | Subscribe | Comments | Forum 
  • Beijing detects traces of radiation in spinach

  • Obama: meeting to avert gov't shutdown "constructive"

  • China urged US to ensure fair play for Chinese companies

  • Managers bring new skills to Chinese government

  • Beijing professor: Get rich or get lost

  • First batch of electric cars hits Shanghai streets

  • Gadhafi, in letter, asks Obama to end strikes

  • China's economic growth is to be slow but steadyChina) Oil price hike leads some to pumps, others to bikes

  • (China) Shanghai permanent resident population exceeds 22.2 millon 
  • (China) Wuhan to fully implement smoking ban at indoor public places 
  • (China) China to build 56 more airports in five years: official
  • (World) Japan bids to stop hydrogen explosion at Fukushima plant
  • (World) Obama talks to Afghan president about Koran burning 
  • (World) Iran to investigate delay in nuclear power plant launch 
  • (World) Climate change compresses living space of hardy plants 
  • (ChinaBiz) Fuel surcharges raised on flights from mainland to HK, Macau
  • (ChinaBiz) Food prices rebound in late March 
  • (ChinaBiz) Benchmark index back to 3,000 points
  • (Sports) Villarreal ready for Europa League quarter-finals 
  • (Sports) Uruguayan Israel to be new coach of El Salvador's team 
  • (Life & Culture) Contemporary Art Fair of Mexico kicks off
  • (Life & Culture) Water temple fair celebrates Eco-tourism Festival
  • (Tibet) Who made the 'Tibet Issue' complicated?
  • Increases the bookmark twitter facebook digg Google Windowslive Delicious buzz friendfeed Linkedin diigo reddit stumbleupon

    China's government once again raised gas and diesel prices from Thursday, as chaotic situation in North Africa and Middle East has sent global crude prices on a rollercoaster run.

    The National Development and Reform Commission, the government's top economic planner, said the domestic wholesale price of regular gasoline will rise by 500 yuan for each ton, or an extra 0.37 yuan per liter. Diesel prices will be lifted by 400 yuan a ton or 0.34 yuan each liter.

    It's China's second fuel price rise this year and the fifth hike since the beginning of 2010.

    Beijing's approval for the country's two biggest state-majority-owned gas companies, Sinopec and PetroChina, to charge more from gas sale is deemed to be a policy shift from previously encouraging private car ownership to conservation of the fossil fuel, experts say.

    As the world's second largest oil consumer, only after the United States, Beijing has come to recognize that the country's huge appetite for oil is not sustainable. Despite the average higher selling prices and taxes levied on cars and SUVs, compared with those in the developed countries, increasingly affluent Chinese families are gobbling them.

    To rein in avid purchasing power of the customers, local authorities in Beijing, Shanghai and other cities have restricted vehicle sales by charging extra levies on plates, or by distributing plates via lottery.

    On the global market, cascading violence and unrest in Libya and oil-producing cartel OPEC's reluctance to increase output pushed U.S. crude price to more than $108 on Tuesday. The cost of a barrel of Brent crude, sourced from the North Sea, hit $119.95, its highest level since August.

    The steadily rising gasoline prices will inevitably have a negative impact on car consumption in the country, particularly, in the sprawling, less developed middle- and small-sized cities, where the average workers' pay is about half or less of their counterparts in the big cities, like Shanghai and Beijing.

    To lessen the burdens of rising gas prices on farmers, bus fleets and taxi drivers, Beijing said that the government will offer subsidies for them.

    However, for the private car-owners, increasing gas charges means higher bills or a bigger dent on their family budgets. To make things worse for them, inflation has been running high since late 2010, forcing Chinese families have to pay more on grain, vegetables, fruit, meat, eggs and the utilities, including tap water, cooking gas and electricity.

    A good number of online commentators, while complaining about inflation and the rising oil prices, began to admit that car-ownership has been proved to be "too costly", and many said that they would drive less and take the public transit for commuting.

    Whether the current round of oil price hike will exacerbate inflation in China, which surged to 4.9 percent in the first two months this year, and is forecasted to exceed 5.0 percent in March, remains to be gauged.

    The People's Bank of China, the central bank, raised the benchmark one-year saving and lending interest rates by a quarter-percentage point on Wednesday, a move widely considered short of taming elevated inflation in the country.

    By Li Hong, People's Daily Online Reading
    • Oil hits new peak despite U.S. inventories hike

    • China to raise gasoline, diesel prices from Thursday

    • Oil edges down after choppy trading

    • Oil refreshes multi-year high on Libya conflict, U.S. data

    • Mexican oil company discovers 5.7 bln barrels of crude in 4 years

    • Bolivia, Venezuela agree to speed up oil investments

    • Libyan rebels fight for control of oil town

    • Oil falls as Libya supply disruption concerns ease

    • Somali pirates seize Kuwaiti crude oil tanker

    • Libya intervention: Driven by oil or humanitarianism?

    Special Coverage
    • Survey for 2011 NPC and CPPCC Sessions
    • Focus On China
    Major headlines
    • Many AIDS 'patients' in China suffer from phobia

    • The Western Australian Publishes Aritlce by Chairman of CPPCC Jia Qinglin

    • Chinese embassy in DPRK mourns wartime Chinese martyrs

    • 10,000 pay homage to legendary ancestor of Chinese

    • Observation network to monitor East China Sea

    • Chinese tourists top monthly arrivals in Australia for 1st time in Feb.

    • Radioactive water to pose little danger to China

    • 460 mln Chinese mourn for deceased during Tomb-Sweeping Day holiday

    • Radioactive cesium detected in more Chinese regions amid Japan nuclear crisis

    • Chinese Premier calls for intensified fight against corruption as situation still "grave"

    Editor's Pick
    Hot Forum Dicussion
    • Japan’s disastrous water flowing into the Pacific, and fallout?

    • Libya: new arms race showcase

    • China's rise: knowns & unknowns

    • Chinese along LoC? India’s top general sounds warning

    • China becoming the Pacific's 'banker'?

    • Chinese suspects tried to smuggle military goods from US?

    • US Senator urges Taiwan F-16 sale