The Phnom Penh Post

Constructi­on on China-Russia gas pipeline making headway

-

CONSTRUCTI­ON has commenced on the southern part of the China-Russia East natural gas pipeline, said China Oil & Gas Pipeline Network Corp, China’s pipeline operator.

The 5,111km China-Russia East natural gas pipeline is the world’s longest across-theriver pipeline constructi­on project that will transport natural gas from Russia to Shanghai by 2025.

The southern part of the project stretches from Hebei province to Shanghai.

Upon completion, the pipeline is expected to transport 18.9 bi l l ion cubic metres of natural gas from Russia ever y yea r to t he Ya ng t z e R iver Delta region.

The long-dista nce natura l gas pipel i ne has t he la rgest d ia meter a nd t he h ig hest pressure among a ll pipelines in China.

It is divided into the northern part, the middle part, and the southern part. The northern part was put into operation last year, and the middle part is expected to be completed by the end of this year.

The southern part of the pipeline is a major project for the newly formed pipeline company. It is also an important measure to promote the constructi­on of “new infrastruc­ture” in the energy sector, China Oil & Gas Pipeline Network Corp said.

Apa r t f rom t r a nspor t i ng nat ura l ga s to t he Ya ng t ze River Delta region, it said, t he project will also interconne­ct t he Yongqi ng c ou nt y- ( i n Hebei prov i nce) Sha ng ha i pipel i ne (u nder c onst r uct ion), t he west line one, t he west line two, and the Rudong (in Jia ngsu prov ince) line.

Al l these measures are expected to improve the energy and transporta­tion environmen­t in the Yangtze River Delta region and enhance the emergency support capabiliti­es of the natural gas pipeline network in the region, it said.

Li Ziyue, an analyst with BloombergN­EF (BNEF), said: “The start of constructi­on of the southern part of China-Russia East Route will further diversify natural gas sources and improve energy security in the Yangtze River Delta region.

“The line is expected to provide the region with 18.9 billion cubic metres of gas [around 30 per cent of the yearly consumptio­n of the region in 2019] when it reaches full capacity in 2025.

“Currently, the region is supplied by China’s West-East Gas Pipelines, the Sichuan-Shanghai pipeline, and six liquefied natural gas [LNG] terminals.”

BNEF estimates that the delivered price of Russian gas in the Delta will likely be potentiall­y cheaper than the long-term contracted LNG prices, she said.

Thi s c oul d reduce t he region’s appetite for contracted LNG, in favour of Russian piped supplies, she said. But current Asian spot LNG prices could still make LNG imports more competitiv­e.

The project involves a shield structure constructi­on that crosses the Yangtze River.

It is currently the world’s across-river shield structure constructi­on with the longest single tunnelling distance, deepest buried depth, highest water pressure, and the largest diameter in the oil and gas pipeline field.

The tunnel has an inner diameter of 6.8m, a horizontal length of 10.23km, and a maximum water pressure of 0.73 megapascal­s.

The shield structure constructi­on is a key part of the whole project. The part is an inevitable passage through which the natural gas from Russia is transporte­d to Shanghai, also the only channel through the river for the coastal natural gas to be transporte­d to Jiangsu.

As the project involves comple x t e c h nolog y, d i f f ic u lt constructi­on levels, and high env i r on ment a l pr ote c t ion requiremen­t, after organising 10 specia l technica l research projec t s, Chi na Oi l & Gas Pipeline Network Corp decided to adopt shield str ucture constructi­on.

Slag waste produced from tunnelling and well digging will be transporte­d to the dumping point using river transporta­tion, in order to achieve green constructi­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia