Chinese firms step up efforts to tap increasing oil demand
15-10-04 Chinese oil companies have stepped up efforts to tap the country's increasing oil demand as oil prices have continued to surge in recent weeks.
Earlier, China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) announced that its BZ 25-1 Oilfield in North China's Bohai Sea started operating, producing about 16,000 bpd of oil from 52 wells with 32 additional wells being completed. Phase II production is expected to be on stream by early 2006, the company said.
The oilfield is the third-largest in the offshore area and has recoverable oil reserves topping 200 mm barrels. The BZ 25-1 Oilfield was jointly developed by CNOOC and American oil company ChevronTexaco. Under the cooperation agreement signed in October 2002, CNOOC holds an 83.8 % stake in the project, and ChevronTexaco owns the rest.
In another development, China has been seeking to pipe oil from its neighbouring countries to quench its thirst for energy. Igor A. Rogachev, Russian Ambassador to China, said that a long-anticipated Sino-Russia oil
pipeline plan would be unveiled in the next few months. The 2,400 km pipeline will link Russia's oil-rich Siberia with China's Daqing.
On Sept. 28, China and Kazakhstan started the construction of a 988 km pipeline, which is expected to be completed by December 2005. The pipeline agreement -- valued at an estimated $ 700 mm -- was signed in May between China's National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC) and Kazakhstan's state-owned oil and gas company KazMunaiGaz.
Once completed, it will have an initial daily capacity of 200,000 barrels, far exceeding the 20,000-30,000 barrels supplied now to China via rail. The figure is planned to double by 2011. According to reports, the Central Asian country was also preparing a feasibility study for a natural gas pipeline.
Meanwhile, China is also in talks with Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan to discuss oil exploration in the Caspian Sea. In international markets, crude oil futures hit a record high of $ 54.45 as a general strike in Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil
producer, added more tension to an already jittery market.
The prices slightly retreated to $ 53.64 but jumped above $ 54 again on speculation sparked by a pipeline explosion in Mexico, raising economists' concerns over the world economy.
US investment bank Morgan Stanley said in a research note that higher oil prices had prompted it to cut its global growth forecast for 2005 to 3.6 % from 3.9 %. For China, the estimate drop could be 0.5 % for a $ 10 increase in oil prices, said Andy Xie, Morgan Stanley chief regional economist of Asia-Pacific.
In Shenzhen, prices of downstream products such as paint and plastic products have jumped 20 to 30 % in the past few week due to surging raw material prices. The thermoplastic material known as ABS resin, for example, is now priced at 11,000 yuan ($ 1,330) per ton, nearly 3,000 yuan higher than last year.
Source: Shenzhen Daily News