Global Times

China-Myanmar energy projects going full steam

Bilateral economic cooperatio­n strengthen­s under key initiative­s

- By Li Xuanmin in Naypyidaw and Zhang Hongpei in Beijing

Crude oil and gas projects between China and Myanmar have played a significan­t role in diversifyi­ng China’s energy import sources and elevating the economic developmen­t of Myanmar as well as the whole Southeast Asian region, highlevel executives from China and Myanmar told the Global Times on Thursday.

The Myanmar-China Crude Oil & Gas Pipeline Project is operated by two companies – South-East Asia Crude Oil Pipeline Co and South-East

Asia Gas Pipeline Co – with Chinese state-owned oil giant CNPC taking a 50.9 percent stake in each.

Between the time that operations began in 2013 and the end of 2019, the 793-kilometer natural gas pipeline transporte­d 24 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas to China and more than 4 bcm to Myanmar. The crude oil pipeline has transporte­d more than 25 million tons of oil to China since it started operations in 2017, data from the South-East Asia Gas Pipeline Co showed.

Li Zilin, president of the company, told the Global Times on Thursday that the oil and gas projects have helped diversify China’s energy imports and greatly boosted local economic developmen­t.

“Myanmar has substantia­l reserves of natural gas offshore, with major fields at sea. Chinese companies’ local operation can help improve Myanmar’s gas exploratio­n level,” Li said, adding that the projects have contribute­d nearly $500 million for Myanmar society including taxes, wages and dividends.

In 2018, China’s natural gas imports accounted for 40 percent of its total demand, while 70 percent of crude oil relied on imports. The import volume of natural gas via the pipeline can account for 10 percent of China’s total imports by land, according to Li.

“With the surging demand for oil and gas in Southweste­rn China, it is expected that there can be huge growth in imported energy via the two pipelines,” said Li.

Projects between China and Myanmar involving energy, within the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative and the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC), have promoted bilateral trade and strengthen­ed China Southeast Asian cooperatio­n in infrastruc­ture. The projects have also had a significan­t influence on the economic developmen­t of the region, said U Kereng Naw Aung, a manager of Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise, which owns 49.1 percent of the South-East Asia Crude Oil Pipeline Co.

“The pipeline has created jobs and raised local living standards,” he said.

Apart from crude oil and natural gas, other areas such as solar energy, railways and agricultur­al products have huge potential that can be tapped by the two countries, according to Li.

The high-speed railway connecting Kunming, capital of Southwest China’s Yunnan Province, and Myanmar’s Kyaukphyu port serves as an important part of the CMEC.

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