A new natural-gas field in Northeast China has proven reserves
of 100 billion cubic meters - more than double this year's
estimated production - Daqing Oilfield said yesterday after a State
expert team verified the find.
Last month, Wang Yupu, president of Daqing Oilfield Co Ltd, said
a preliminary probe showed that the gas field has reserves of at
least 100 billion cubic meters.
The new gas field, named Qingshen, is located under Daqing
oilfield in Heilongjiang Province, which produced 46.4 million tons
of crude oil last year.
It would be the country' fifth-biggest gas field after the
Tarim, Qaidam, Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia and Sichuan basins, according
to industry experts.
"The discovery is of strategic importance to PetroChina's
long-term development blueprint of 'stabilizing output in the east
while stepping up development in the west,'" Daqing Oilfield, a
PetroChina subsidiary, said in a report.
"The find will add to the energy potential of Daqing, whose oil
reserves are on the decline," said Gong Jinshuang, a senior oil and
gas analyst with the research arm of PetroChina's parent company,
China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC).
Bi Jianguo, spokesman for Hong Kong-listed PetroChina, would not
comment on the find.
The State expert team, set up by the Ministry of Land and
Resources (MLR),
consisted of eight senior oil and gas experts from the country's
three top oil producers: PetroChina, Sinopec and China National
Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC).
Industry analysts said the finding would boost PetroChina's
shares "to some extent."
But there would not be big fluctuation "because it will take
years to turn new reserves into oil and gas output," said Hou
Jixiong, a senior oil and gas analyst with Guotai Jun'an Securities
Co Ltd.
According to the latest assessment, China has much more reserves
than previously projected, said Che Changbo, deputy-director of the
MLR's Oil and Gas Resources Strategic Research Center.
China is expected to produce 180 million tons of crude oil and
48 billion cubic meters of natural gas this year. "The country will
rely on domestic supplies for most of its energy demand," Che
said.
(China Daily December 15, 2005)