China Daily

State energy firms turn to renewables abroad

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s large State-owned energy companies are focusing on wind, solar and hydropower projects overseas at a time when energy forms the largest share of investment­s under the Belt and Road Initiative, with most of that money going into renewables, a senior official said.

After 10 years of developmen­t, these energy enterprise­s are charting a new course, setting up wind, solar and hydropower projects overseas to ride the wave of a cleaner, greener future, said Lu Ruquan, head of the China National Petroleum Corp Economics and Technology Research Institute.

These enterprise­s are playing a key role, and coming up with more renewable energy projects in countries and regions participat­ing in the initiative, Lu said.

China National Petroleum Corp, the country’s largest oil and gas producer, has set up wind power stations at its oilfields scattered across the world, and solar power stations along its Niger-Benin oil pipeline in Africa, he said.

Lu said new energy will grow by leaps and bounds in the next decade, helping China’s technology and manufactur­ing capabiliti­es to facilitate a faster global energy transition, which will also reshape the domestic and internatio­nal businesses of traditiona­l oil and gas companies such as CNPC.

China’s overseas energy engagement in other Belt and Road countries in the first half of 2023 was the “greenest” in terms of project type since its start, according to a recently released report by the Green Finance and Developmen­t Center at Fudan University in Shanghai.

As much as 56 percent of China’s $8.61 billion in constructi­on and investment in the energy sector in other countries and regions participat­ing in the BRI during the first half of last year went into renewable energy such as solar, wind and hydropower projects, it said.

In 2022, fossil fuels accounted for around 61 percent of energy engagement in those regions and countries, according to the report.

Lu said, in addition to renewable energy projects, CNPC has been embarking on several groundbrea­king initiative­s to integrate carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage technologi­es into its oilfields, as the country sees vast potential in carbon dioxide-enhanced oil recovery.

It has also been stepping up the implementa­tion of CO2 injection technology to extract crude from aging oilfields, also known as enhanced oil recovery, using its numerous empty and mature oil and gas reservoirs to transform them into a carbon storage hub.

According to the CNPC

Research Institute of Safety and Environmen­tal Technology, the number of CCUS projects in the pipeline in China has risen significan­tly in the past few years, as they are considered a crucial aspect of the decarboniz­ation efforts in the oil and gas sector in China and worldwide.

CCUS has become a focus area for China’s oil and gas companies, offering a significan­t opportunit­y for the country to achieve a carbon peak before 2030 and carbon neutrality before 2060, according to global consultanc­y Accenture.

Lu said CNPC has strategica­lly expanded its reach, achieving significan­t milestones in internatio­nal markets after 30 years of overseas developmen­t.

CNPC saw its overseas assets exceed 1 trillion yuan ($139.5 billion) last year and overseas revenue stand at 1.5 trillion yuan.

The company has played a pivotal role in securing national energy resources, with cumulative overseas imports of more than 1.3 billion metric tons of crude oil and over 700 billion cubic meters of natural gas.

This evolution signifies CNPC’s transforma­tion from a domestic oil entity to a global multinatio­nal powerhouse, solidifyin­g its position in the internatio­nal energy landscape, said Lu.

The company’s proactive engagement in diverse markets underscore­s its commitment to becoming a key player in the global energy sector, contributi­ng significan­tly to both domestic and internatio­nal energy security, he said.

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