|              China, foreseeing major potential in             natural gas to reduce heavy reliance on coal and oil, plans to build             a second pipeline linking gas deposits in the west to the             energy-guzzling Guangdong Province in the south.                                        The new pipeline, still in the             preliminary study stage, is expected to connect the gas-rich             Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the west with Guangzhou, capital             city of Guangdong Province, a senior official from the Ministry of             Land and Resources (MLR), told             China Daily yesterday. The line will bypass Zhengzhou,             capital of Central China's Henan Province.                            "Government bodies and companies,             including the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), are still in the             preliminary study of the project," said the ministry official who             did not want to be identified.                            PetroChina, following the operational             start-up of its first West-East Gas Pipeline at the end of last             year, will be the builder of the new pipe, the official said.                                        The first line has a designed annual             capacity to pump 12 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas from             the Tarim Basin of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region to the             commercial hub Shanghai through a 4,000-kilometer-long pipeline.                                        An official surnamed Gong from             PetroChina's subsidiary for natural gas and pipeline operations             yesterday told China Daily, "PetroChina is considering the             feasibility of the project."                            The new pipe is designed with a bigger             investment than the current US$5.2 billion west-east line, the             official said.                            PetroChina sources said construction of             the new pipeline to Guangzhou will start in 2020 and will have a             capacity of 26 bcm a year, more than double that of the current line             to Shanghai.                            Jin Zhengli, a senior engineer at the             pipeline engineering department at the PetroChina Planning &             Engineering Institute, said PetroChina would use imported natural             from neighboring Russia or Kazakhstan to fill the two pipelines. Gas             reserves in Xinjiang are not sufficient to meet the surging demand             in the energy-hungry Guangdong and Shanghai, he said.                            PetroChina has confirmed 658 bcm of             proven gas reserves in Xinjiang's Tarim Basin, but finding further             reserves seems "not as optimistic" as originally estimated, Jin told             China Daily.                            "The new pipeline is designed in             parallel with the natural gas import schemes from the two             neighboring countries," Jin said.                            Moscow-based OAO Gazprom, the world's             biggest natural gas producer, announced in September it is talking             with PetroChina's parent China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) to             export gas to China through a cross-border pipeline.                            The possible route may run through             Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region or Northeast China's Heilongjiang             Province, Alexander Medvedev, deputy chief executive officer of             Gazprom, said. Each pipe has an annual capacity of as much as 30 bcm             a year.                            With Kazakhstan, the two countries last             week announced the operation of China's first cross-border crude oil             pipeline, initially carrying 10 million tons of crude oil from the             Central Asian nation to Northwest China's Xinjiang.                            Industry analysts said the first oil             pipeline would pave the way for further co-operation in pumping gas             from Kazakhstan to China.                            The new gas pipeline, together with the             operational one, could be a strategic long-term energy blueprint to             use cleaner natural gas and replace the environment-polluting coal             and oil.                            The country intends to increase the             percentage taken up by gas in the overall energy sources mix to 10             percent by 2010, from the current 3 percent.                            PetroChina's Jin said the new pipeline             still faces market risks since China will have diversified sources             for natural gas supply, like LNG (liquefied natural gas) terminals             in the coastal areas in a few years.                            China National Offshore Oil Corp has             planned four LNG terminals in Shanghai, Zhejiang, Fujian and             Guangdong, expected to begin operations in three to five years.                                        "There will be more competition in the             (natural gas) market," said Jin.                            China's gas output this year is             expected to reach 48 bcm, and the government plans to increase the             figure to 80 bcm by 2010 and 120 bcm by 2020.                            But even so, the production looks             likely to fall short of the expected demand of 120 bcm per year by             2010 and 200 bcm by 2020.                            Wu Qingbiao, secretary-general of             Guangdong Oil & Gas Association, said the demand for natural gas             in the southern province is "enormous," driven by gas power             generation and other industrial sectors. "We can almost take as much             as they can supply," Wu said.  |