Guess planned (command?) economies do not have to wait for an energy bill to reign in energy consumption.
Business Week
July 19, 2005
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/jul2005/nf20050719_7471_db016.htmEven China's enormous thirst for energy appears to have its limits. Evidence has mounted across Asia in recent days that oil prices have finally grown too rich for China, which accounted for more than 40% of total growth in world demand in 2004 and is expected to feed even more explosive demand this year. But on July 18, OPEC cut 150,000 barrels a day from its forecast for oil-demand growth this year, citing China's weakening appetite for crude.
. . .
Fundamentally, sources say the reluctance of China's government to allow significant increases for domestic "guidance prices" for important retail products like diesel and gasoline has pushed the country's state-owned and independent refiners to the breaking point. The disparity between high Asian benchmark crude-oil prices and closely controlled prices for the products that are refined from that crude oil have forced significant cuts in production runs at refineries and have eaten into Chinese crude demand.
Moreover, artificially low domestic retail prices have also turned China into an exporter of products that are usually in tight supply. Its major trading companies, China Oil and Unipec, have been exporting significant extra volumes of "gasoil" (heating oil and diesel fuel) in recent weeks, a product that China ordinarily imports in volume. In other refined-product markets where China normally falls short on domestic production, importers have stopped buying foreign products altogether.
Meanwhile, domestic resale values in China for other hydrocarbons -- fuel oil, propane, and butane -- have run below import prices for large chunks of 2005, a phenomenon referred to in China as dao gua. During spells of dao gua, fuel oil and liquefied petroleum gas importers normally put product into stock. Stocks are now so high in some ports that importers have stopped buying altogether for weeks on end -- causing a second major dent in China's apparent oil demand, on top of diminished crude-oil runs.