LAUNCESTON, Australia, Nov 21 (Reuters) - A surge of diesel and gasoline exports from China in the last northern winter eased then-prevailing fuel shortages in Asia but a repeat performance this year is unlikely.
Diesel exports peaked at 2.39 million metric tons in January this year, before dropping to just 290,000 by June, according to official customs data.
Since then they have eased back, dropping to 1.18 million metric tons in September and 1.11 million in October.
November exports are expected to less than 700,000 metric tons, according to an estimate by LSEG based on ship-tracking and port data.
Shipments this month are likely to be around 600,000 metric tons, according to LSEG, which would be the weakest month this year.
Persons:
LSEG, Kpler, Robert Birsel
Organizations:
Diesel, LSEG, Reuters, Thomson
Locations:
LAUNCESTON, Australia, China, Asia, Russia, Ukraine, Beijing, Singapore, Europe