Global Times - Weekend

Honor in the field

People’s role model Wang Qimin hails oil workers

- By Li Qiao in Daqing

Ahead of the National Day, Chinese President Xi Jinping presented national medals and honorary titles to people who have made outstandin­g achievemen­ts for the country. Among them, Wang Qimin, 83, was given the honorary title of “People’s Role Model.”

Wang told the Global Times that he is grateful to the country and that this honor belongs to all who devote themselves to China’s oil industry.

“I am so proud of the rapid developmen­t of our country. In the new era, the younger generation should carry forward the spirit of scientific innovation to continue contributi­ng to China’s oil industry,” Wang said.

People’s role model

“This honor is not mine alone. It is for the people of Daqing, for the oil workers and for the people of Heilongjia­ng [Province],” Wang told the Global Times, noting that “it shows the importance of inheriting the spirit of the ‘Iron Man’ and national expectatio­ns of the revitaliza­tion and developmen­t of the old industrial base of Northeast China.”

Wang’s hometown is Huzhou in East China’s Zhejiang Province. He came to Daqing, Heilongjia­ng Province, in 1960 in response to the nation’s call to develop the Daqing oil field.

Inspired by the diligence of Wang Jinxi, an oil worker who earned the title of “Iron Man” for his spirit of never giving up, Wang Qimin, who is regarded as the second “Iron Man,” assiduousl­y studied the scientific technology of oil production on untapped reservoirs.

He made major contributi­ons to maintainin­g Daqing’s high and stable annual yield of 50 million tons of crude oil for 27 consecutiv­e years.

The year 2019 is the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China and the 60th anniversar­y of the discovery of the Daqing oil field.

The discovery of the Songji No.3 oil well on September 26, 1959 marked the first step toward establishi­ng the oil field, which would end the era in which China had d no oil l production. d

The Daqing oil field, as the largest oil production base in China, had produced 2.39 billion tons of crude oil by the end of the first half of 2019, according to the Daqing Oil Field Company Limited.

Scientific innovation

The revitaliza­tion and developmen­t of an old oil field is not easy; and scientific innovation is important, Wang said.

“It’s important for young people to be courageous in confrontin­g difficulti­es and questionin­g existing theories, to be open-minded in accepting criticism, and to have the wisdom to achieve scientific breakthrou­ghs,” Wang told the Global Times.

This wisdom is acquired from opponents, explorers and those who have made unsuccessf­ul attempts, Wang explained.

Since its peak of 50 million tons of crude oil in 1976, Daqing oil field has maintained stable production and greatly contribute­d to the developmen­t of national economy. However, the increasing imbalance between the reserves and production of the oil field and the insufficie­nt replacemen­t of gas resources has made it increasing­ly difficult to maintain stable and high yields.

In the late 1970s, Wang began to study the possibilit­y of using thin oil layers to increase oil production. He has never forgotten the pride he felt after making a breakthrou­gh in oil production on untapped reservoirs.

Both in China and abroad, untapped reservoirs were regarded as a waste in mining. Wang proposed that they were in fact a resource that could be developed and utilized.

“Many experts questioned us, and we failed many times while exploring, but we were not discourage­d,” Wang said.

After seven years, Wang and his colleagues successful­ly developed techniques to utilize the untapped reservoir, opening up areas for the latestage excavation of old oil fields, and formed technology to make use of the thin and poor reservoirs, the majority of which are untapped reservoirs.

“One man’s power is limited. Cooperatio­n between discipline­s and colleagues made everything possible,” Wang said.

‘Stupid’ man

“I am a ‘stupid’ man,” Wang said, adding that “my whole life was devoted to one thing only — oil recovery.”

“Stupid” students chose to study oil as China was regarded as an oil-poor country in the late 1950s, Wang said. His more “clever” classmates changed their major after three years to improve their employment prospects, but he did not.

“In my fourth year in college, a huge oil field was discovered in Northeast China,” Wang said, noting that “I have the same birthday as the Daqing oil field. I assume everything was fated.”

Working conditions were extremely hard in the early stages of the developmen­t of the oil field. Wang suffered from severe ankylosing spondyliti­s because of the cold weather and work intensity.

His wife once threatened him with divorce unless he went to work in Beijing. Other oil fields tried to recruit him with offers of better treatment. Still, no one could shake his determinat­ion.

Many people pursue management positions once they have made achievemen­ts in scientific research, but Wang encourages young people to embrace the spirit of scientific innovation to contribute to building the future of China, believing that the country will further develop and prosper.

 ?? Photos: Li Qiao/GT ?? Top: Wang Qimin, a “People’s Role Model,” holds a rock core sample at his Daqing Oil Field Company Limited office in Daqing, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province. Below: Daqing Oil Field
Photos: Li Qiao/GT Top: Wang Qimin, a “People’s Role Model,” holds a rock core sample at his Daqing Oil Field Company Limited office in Daqing, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province. Below: Daqing Oil Field

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