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

Yinson Production Names FSO for Murphy's Lac Da Vang Project off Vietnam

Jadestone Brings First Malaysia Campaign Well Online at 3,000 bpd

Saipem to Sell Saudi Shallow-Water Drilling Business to ADES for $285M

ASCO Sets Up Shop in Qatar to Drive Middle East Expansion

Mako Offshore Field Takes Step Toward First Gas with PT PAL Contract Award

Valeura Concludes Nong Yao Drilling Ops, Boosts Gulf of Thailand Production

Oil Edges Higher as Uncertainty Clouds US-Iran Truce

RINA Gets Safety Assessment Role on Indonesia's H2WATT Hydrogen Hub

TGS Books 3D Streamer Seismic Job in Africa and Middle East region

UAE Speeds Up Pipeline Project to Help Bypass Hormuz

Current News

Yinson Production Names FSO for Murphy's Lac Da Vang Project off Vietnam

Jadestone Brings First Malaysia Campaign Well Online at 3,000 bpd

Saipem to Sell Saudi Shallow-Water Drilling Business to ADES for $285M

Oman Opens Alternative Hormuz Lanes as Shipping Recovery Continues

ASCO Sets Up Shop in Qatar to Drive Middle East Expansion

Oil Falls as Signs of Hormuz Recovery Weigh on Market

Mako Offshore Field Takes Step Toward First Gas with PT PAL Contract Award

Perenco Inks Gas Sales Deal for Vietnamese Offshore Field

Iran War Sparks Global Rush to Build Strategic Oil Reserves

Qatari LNG Carriers Re-Enter Hormuz as Traffic Through Strait Slumps

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