| Country looking west to Xinjiang for oil and gas supply
2005-06-22 China Daily
A State Council leader has
called for a wider exploration of the potentially oil-rich Xinjiang to make the
region the country's strategic oil and gas base.
During a recent visit to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Vice-Premier
Zeng Peiyan said efforts will be focused on the Tarim, Junggar, and Turpan-Hami
basins.
Zeng also said oil companies and local governments should look into price
reforms in the energy sector, the levying of a fuel tax and an increase in the
resources tax.
The basins, equivalent in size to France and Britain, sit on 30 per cent of
China's total oil and 34 per cent of its natural gas reserves. But more than 80
per cent of the areas remains untapped.
"Exploration in Xinjiang is still in an embryonic stage," said Zeng at an oil
and gas exploration meeting in Tarim on Sunday.
"We should strive to find large oil and gas fields, and make Xinjiang the
country's strategic oil and gas base."
Zeng visited major oil and gas fields in the Tarim Basin late last week after
completing a tour of Russia, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar - all
major oil producers.
Xinjiang pumped 22 million tons of oil last year, or 12 per cent of the
nation's total.
Currently China's third largest oil producing region, Xinjiang plans to more
than double its oil production to 50 million tons by 2010.
The target, if realized, will place Xinjiang ahead of Daqing in the northeast
as the largest oil production base in China.
Beijing also sees Xinjiang as a frontier post from which to pump in imported
crude from Central Asian countries.
China and Kazakhstan are building a 1,200-kilometre cross-border oil pipeline
to bring in 10 million tons of crude annually from Kazakhstan to Xinjiang.
The pipeline is expected to become operational by the end of the year and
plans are in place to double its capacity to 20 million tons in the future.
The development of the oil and gas business will help drive the local economy
and create jobs, stabilizing a region where millions of people of about a dozen
ethnic minorities live, Beijing hopes.
But experts have warned the prospects of oil exploitation in the region
remain uncertain, given its complicated geography. And production costs tend to
be much higher than the east as oil companies have to drill deeper in the
deserts.
"It is highly risky to explore for oil and gas in Xinjiang," said a veteran
engineer with China National Petroleum Corp, the country's largest oil producer.
"More importantly, Xinjiang is far from the major oil markets on the east
coast. High transportation costs will largely erode the profit margins of oil
companies," the engineer who did not want to be named said yesterday in
Beijing. |