The Chinese Government will soon issue an industry policy to
regulate the coal-chemicals sector, after a circular last month
ordered local authorities to tighten their grip on the approval of
new coal-to-petrochemicals projects in China.
Industry insiders familiar with the situation said the move aims
to ward off a potential investment spree as soaring global crude
prices press China to turn to alternatives based on its abundant
coal resources.
"Investment in coal-chemicals projects in China has shown signs
of overheating. Many proposed plants will face great risk in terms
of both technical feasibility and capital investment if we don't
put a brake on them," said an official from the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), who wished to remain
anonymous. "The upcoming policy aims to set the coal-chemicals
industry on the right development track."
The coal-chemicals industry includes coking, coal gasification,
liquefaction and the production of calcium carbide, the NDRC
said.
Most of the under-construction coal-to-oil and coal-to-olefin
projects in China, with a combined annual capacity of more than
100,000 tons, have not ensured viable technology and their single
capacity does not satisfy government requirements, the NDRC
said.
Pan Derun, vice-president of the China Petroleum and Chemical
Industry Association, said the government would likely publicize
the new industry policy by the end of the year, in line with last
month's circular.
"It will not be as early as October, but hopefully within the
year," said Pan, who participated in the workshop on the new
regulation.
Related NDRC departments have yet to finalize the details of the
policy, and an exact issue date for the new rules is not known, the
NDRC official told China Daily on Friday.
The new industry policy will not place curbs on foreign
companies' participation in China's coal-to-petrochemicals
projects, although some industry analysts have suggested the
government encourage China's homegrown technology and engineering,
according to the NDRC official.
An increasing number of global giants in the coal conversion
field such as Royal Dutch Shell and South Africa-based Sasol have
shown strong enthusiasm for China, the world's No. 2 energy
consumer and top coal producer.
Shell has so far clinched 15 deals to supply coal gasification
technology to China, one of which is a 50-50 joint venture with the
country's biggest oil refiner Sinopec. It has so far been used to
produce synthetic gas for the manufacture of fertilizers, hydrogen
and methanol.
Shell and Sasol have signed a deal with State-owned China
Shenhua Group to study two coal-to-liquids plants in northwestern
China with an investment of up to US$12 billion.
Meanwhile, both small and large domestic firms are mushrooming
in the booming coal-to-petrochemicals market in China, prompting
industry worries of overcapacity due to a potential investment
binge.
"It has become a really hot investment destination. Almost every
mining company said they want to build coal-to-petrochemicals
projects," said Li Fengshan, deputy-director of China Petroleum and
Chemical's international cooperation department.
"If not well planned, the increasing number of coal-chemicals
plants in China may lead to huge wastage of natural resources,"
said the petrochemical association's Pan.
Large-scale coal-chemicals projects need tens of millions of
cubic meters of water for the production process annually, and
runaway development of such projects will have an impact on the
environment, the July NDRC circular said.
To address the situation, the nation's top economic policy
planner said in the circular that local authorities should not
approve new coal-to-petrochemicals projects until they complete a
well planned industry blueprint.
A major industry platform for government officials, company
executives and analysts to canvass their ideas, Beijing-based China
Petroleum and Chemical will work with the China Coal Industry
Association and the Shaanxi provincial government during a two-day
symposium on coal conversion and the coal-chemical industry on
October 24.
(China Daily August 26, 2006)