China to Launch State Pipeline Group

Friday, December 6, 2019

China plans to launch its long-awaited national oil and gas pipeline company on Monday, part of a sector-wide reform aimed at providing fair market access to infrastructure and boost investment in oil and gas production.

Most of the country's pipeline infrastructure is controlled by energy giant PetroChina, CNPC's listed arm, and small, non state-owned oil and gas producers and distributors often don't have access to the pipelines at competitive rates, analysts have said.

This also hinders companies from investing in oil and gas exploration as they are concerned about access to the pipelines.

Beijing started considering reforming the sector nearly a decade ago to improve access but only approved the plans early this year, spurred by a national campaign to boost consumption of the cleaner burning natural gas and curb dirtier coal.

Launch of the new company, which combines the long-distance pipelines assets of the country's state-owned energy companies,, will be held at 0200 GMT on Monday and will be attended by China's Vice Premier Han Zheng, according to a notice issued by the Preparation Group of National Oil and Gas Pipeline Company.

Two China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) officials confirmed the event.

The new company, valued at $80 billion to $105 billion by consultancy Wood Mackenzie, will join the league of the country's oil and gas giants CNPC, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp (Sinopec) and China National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC).

Its creation marks the largest industry reshuffle in the past two decades.

China is the world's second-largest oil consumer and third-largest natural gas user, but its 133,000-kilometer (82,600 miles) long-distance oil and gas pipeline network is less than one-fifth the size of the system in the United States, the world's biggest oil and gas consumer.

China's gas demand is expected to rise by 2.5 times from 2018 to 673 billion cubic metres (bcm) by 2040, accounting for half of Asia's total gas consumption, according Wood Mackenzie.


(Reporting by Muyu Xu, Aizhu Chen and Dominique Patton; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

Categories: Pipelines Asia

Related Stories

ADNOC Gas Signs $3B LNG Supply Deal with India’s HPCL

Philippines Makes First Offshore Gas Discovery in Over a Decade

Thailand's Gulf Energy Eyes Long-Term LNG Supply

Vantris Energy Lands Petronas Job on Malaysia’s Offshore Fields

Murphy Oil Appraisal Well Boosts Resource Outlook at Field off Vietnam

Petrovietnam Agrees First-Ever LNG Term Deal with Shell

Jereh Group Delivers Oil Separation Systems for Petrobras’ FPSO Units

South Korean Firm Buys Into Indonesian Offshore Oil Block

CNOOC Launches New Offshore Oil Development in Southern China

Indonesia Tenders Eight Oil and Gas Blocks as Output Declines

Current News

Inpex Moves to Accelerate Indonesia’s Abadi LNG Project

Chevron in Final Talks with Eneos, Glencore on Singapore Assets Sale

Seadrill Firms Up Offshore Drilling Workload with Multi-Region Contract Awards

Turkish Petroleum, Chevron Discuss Joint Oil and Gas Exploration

ADNOC Gas Signs $3B LNG Supply Deal with India’s HPCL

Samos Energy Buys Suksan Salamander FSO from Altera Infrastructure

Philippines Makes First Offshore Gas Discovery in Over a Decade

Woodside to Supply LNG to JERA During Japan's Winter Peak

Fugro, PTSC G&S Extend Partnership for Vietnam's Offshore Wind Push

Thailand's Gulf Energy Eyes Long-Term LNG Supply

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com