LINE

Text:AAAPrint
Economy

China's quest for deep-sea oil(2)

1
2017-12-14 09:34Global Times Editor: Li Yan ECNS App Download

While driving such major breakthroughs in technology and engineering, the country began to witness an increase in orders for China-made deep-sea oil drilling equipment, from both domestic and foreign companies, according to a report published on news website jiemian.com on Wednesday.

After starting from scratch, orders for Chinese deep-sea drilling equipment now account for 25 percent of total global orders, the report said, adding that, before 2006, China had no self-developed deep-sea drilling platform that could be used for 300-meter-deep waters in the South China Sea.

China's first self-developed deep-sea oil drilling platform was the "Haiyang Shiyou 981," which was completed in 2010 and went into operation in 2012, according to the report on jiemian.com.

Expansion ventures

Apart from technological advances, Chinese companies have also been extensively expanding their deep-sea oil drilling operations both in Chinese waters and abroad.

In 2016, China discovered its first major deep-sea natural gas reservoir in the east of the South China Sea, according to the report on jiemian.com.

As of Wednesday, China had so far discovered more than 13 major natural gas and oil reservoirs in the deep-water areas of the South China Sea, with a total estimated reserve of 300 billion cubic meters of natural gas and 68.29 million cubic meters of oil that together are worth more than 404.7 billion yuan ($61.13 billion), data from the report showed.

Chinese companies such as State-owned energy giant China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) have also been involved in more and more overseas deep-sea natural gas and oil exploration projects, media reports said.

"We have expanded our deep-water exploration operations to Mexico, Brazil, western Africa and Ireland," Xu Keqiang, a deputy general-manager at CNOOC, said during a forum on deep-sea energy in November.

CNOOC's overseas moves have included an acquisition of stakes in a Nigerian deep-sea oil project in 2006, a takeover of Canadian oil and gas company Nexen Inc in 2013 and a purchase of offshore oil projects in Brazil in November this year, according to media reports.

Xu said at the November forum that CNOOC is planning to reach a collective annual output of 10 million tons of oil and natural gas from overseas deep-sea projects.

Lin, the expert at Xiamen University, said "basically, Chinese companies are deeply involved in all the major regions for deep-sea oil drilling and exploration."

He noted that apart from CNOOC, other State-owned companies such as China Petroleum and Chemical Corp (Sinopec) as well as China National Oil and Gas Exploration and Development Corp are also expanding their deep-sea oil drilling operations abroad.

Energy security

Experts said that China's quest for deep-sea energy started a few years ago when oil prices were very high and that China's demand for oil has continued to rise.

"China made deep-sea energy exploration a national strategic sector of development to basically ensure long-term energy security for the country," said Han of china5e.com.

Lin also opined that due to the heavy investment and technicalities required by deep-sea drilling and exploration, the fast rise in China's technological ability and operation expansion was largely fueled by hefty government funding for research and development efforts.

"A group of companies or even a single company cannot achieve such successes alone within such a short time frame - even if they tried - without government support," Lin said, noting "the cost is just too high and it doesn't make sense in terms of probability for companies to pursue [these ventures singlehandedly]."

Both those experts pointed out that even with all the technological advances today, companies would still be reluctant to put so much focus on deep-sea oil exploration with oil prices being relatively low at the moment and if it were not for the country's long-term energy security goals.

"It's definably an investment for the future, not a market business for the present, [especially] when oil prices are so low," Lin said.

  

Related news

MorePhoto

Most popular in 24h

MoreTop news

MoreVideo

News
Politics
Business
Society
Culture
Military
Sci-tech
Entertainment
Sports
Odd
Features
Biz
Economy
Travel
Travel News
Travel Types
Events
Food
Hotel
Bar & Club
Architecture
Gallery
Photo
CNS Photo
Video
Video
Learning Chinese
Learn About China
Social Chinese
Business Chinese
Buzz Words
Bilingual
Resources
ECNS Wire
Special Coverage
Infographics
Voices
LINE
Back to top Links | About Us | Jobs | Contact Us | Privacy Policy
Copyright ©1999-2018 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.