China Daily (Hong Kong)

Storage capacity is set to expand further

- By ZHENG XIN

China has been expanding its undergroun­d gas storage facilities in an attempt to shift away from coal and oil, and to avoid a repeat of the gas shortage during cold snaps last winter.

The country’s 25 undergroun­d gas storage facilities, which are designed to store 41.5 billion cubic meters of natural gas, now only have a working storage capacity of 18 billion cubic meters.

It is far from enough to hedge against shortages of the natural gas supply, according to Guo Jiaofeng of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

Compared with gas tanks above the ground, undergroun­d gas storage facilities are safer and more durable, with larger storage capacity and lower costs.

The volume of undergroun­d natural gas storage was only equivalent to 4 percent of the country’s consumptio­n at the end of 2017, while the average world level is 12 percent, figures from the center show.

As China’s natural gas consumptio­n is expected to exceed 500 billion cubic meters in 2030, the volume of undergroun­d natural gas storage should increase to at least twice the size of the current scale, Guo said.

China National Petroleum Corp, the nation’s largest oil producer, which built 23 of China’s 25 gas storage facilities, started injecting gas into an undergroun­d storage facility in Southwest China’s Chongqing in April, marking the beginning of the stockpilin­g season for the heating fuel over the next six months.

The company supplied a record 7.4 billion cubic meters of natural gas last winter from the undergroun­d storage facilities, a 21 percent jump from the previous year to ease the pressure of peak gas demand in winter.

It also plans to supply 700 million cubic meters more this winter out of the storage facilities than it did last winter.

As part of the country’s 13th Five-Year Plan (201620), the government plans to increase working storage capacity to more than 35 billion cubic meters by 2030.

This amounts to between 4.8 percent and 5.8 percent of the demand, based on forecasts from Sanford C. Bernstein & Co, while the world average is 11.7 percent.

Han Xiaoping, chief informatio­n officer of China Energy Net Consulting, says considerin­g the high dependence on foreign oil and gas, undergroun­d gas storage tanks should be encouraged to prevent future gas shortages.

Wang Lu, an analyst from Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, echoed his opinion, saying China’s plan to add undergroun­d gas storage should help ease the pressure of peak gas demand in winter.

“The country’s gas consumptio­n peaks during the winter heating season but current storage capacity has restricted supply to industrial consumers during winter,” she said.

“We estimate the storage capacity will rise to 4.1 percent of the gas demand in 2020 compared with the 2.8 percent in 2015,” she said.

 ?? HU QINGMING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Workers operate a drill at the constructi­on site of an undergroun­d gas storage facility in Puyang, Henan province, on Feb 27.
HU QINGMING / FOR CHINA DAILY Workers operate a drill at the constructi­on site of an undergroun­d gas storage facility in Puyang, Henan province, on Feb 27.

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