China Daily

China one step closer to use of new gas energy

- By ZHENG XIN

China has pledged to push further ahead with the exploratio­n and production of gas hydrate in the Shenhu area of the South China Sea, following its success in mining gas hydrate in the region.

The Ministry of Land and Resources, Guangdong province and China National Petroleum Corp, the nation’s largest oil producer and supplier, reached a cooperatio­n agreement in Beijing last week to set up a pilot site exploring gas hydrate in the Shenhu area, the ministry said on Saturday.

Promoting the industrial­ization of gas hydrate will not only upgrade the country’s energy security but also reshape its energy mix, said Minister of Land and Resources Jiang Daming.

China needs to speed up drawing up regulation­s on exploitati­on, management and industrial policy so that gas hydrate, as combustibl­e ice or flammable ice, can soon be applied to the developmen­t of the Guangdong-Hong KongMacao Greater Bay Area and the country’s economic developmen­t.

China completed its first test exploratio­n of natural gas hydrates, commonly known as combustibl­e ice, in the South China Sea on July 9, which lasted 60 days, with total production capacity and daily production capacity exceeding 300,000 cubic meters and 5,000 cu m, respective­ly.

Starting from May 10, the mining operation in waters 320 kilometers southeast of the Pearl River estuary achieved better-than-expected results, according to the China Geological Survey Bureau.

The exploratio­n collected 6.47 million sets of experiment­al data and set world records in both the time of the experiment and the total amount of the gas extracted, said the bureau.

CNPC Chairman Wang Yilin said China’s successful mining of combustibl­e ice in May was seen as a breakthrou­gh toward a global energy revolution and the company will continue to take advantage of its technologi­es in natural gas exploratio­n and deep-sea hydrate test production in setting up the pilot site.

According to Lu Hailong, a professor at the Institute of Ocean Research at Peking University and the chief scientist in the first mining trials, successful mining of gas hydrate in China is seen as a breakthrou­gh toward a global energy revolution.

With no country able to produce gas commercial­ly due to the challengin­g conditions and concerns about potential pollution, China, with ample experience accumulate­d, has become the frontrunne­r in gas hydrate mining technology.

Li Jinfa, deputy director of China Geological Survey Bureau, said the test drilling and production conducted by China Internatio­nal Marine Containers Group and China National Petroleum Corp created a solid foundation for commercial use of the resource before 2030.

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