Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China, Japan mine seas’ frozen gas

‘Combustibl­e ice’ is abundant on seafloor, arduous to tap

- MATTHEW BROWN

BEIJING — Commercial developmen­t of the globe’s reserves of a frozen fossil fuel known as “combustibl­e ice” has moved closer to reality after Japan and China successful­ly extracted the material from the seafloor off their coastlines.

But experts said Friday that large-scale production remains many years away — and if not done properly could flood the atmosphere with climate-changing greenhouse gases.

Combustibl­e ice is a frozen mixture of water and concentrat­ed natural gas. Technicall­y known as methane hydrate, it can be lit on fire in its frozen state and is believed to comprise one of the world’s most abundant fossil fuels.

The official Chinese news agency Xinhua reported that the fuel was successful­ly mined by a drilling rig operating in the South China Sea on Thursday. Chinese Minister of Land and Resources Jiang Daming declared the event a breakthrou­gh moment heralding a potential “global energy revolution.”

A drilling crew in Japan reported a similar successful operation two weeks earlier, on May 4 offshore the Shima Peninsula.

For Japan, methane hydrate offers the chance to reduce its heavy reliance on imported fuels if it can tap into reserves off its coastline. In China, it could serve as a cleaner substitute for

coal-burning power plants and steel factories that have polluted much of the country with lung-damaging smog.

The South China Sea has become a focal point of regional political tensions as China has claimed swaths of disputed territory as its own. Previous sea oil exploratio­n efforts by China met resistance, especially from Vietnam, but its methane hydrate operation was described as being outside the most hotly contested areas.

Methane hydrate has been found beneath seafloors, and buried inside Arctic permafrost and beneath Antarctic ice. The United States and India also have research programs pursuing technologi­es to capture the fuel.

Estimates of worldwide reserves range from 10,000 trillion cubic feet up to 100,000 trillion cubic feet, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. By comparison, total worldwide production of natural gas was 124 billion

cubic feet in 2015, the most recent year available.

That means methane hydrate reserves could meet global gas demands for 80 to 800 years at current consumptio­n rates.

Yet efforts to successful­ly extract the fuel at a profit have eluded private and stateowned energy companies for decades. That’s in part because of the high cost of extraction techniques, which can use large amounts of water or carbon dioxide to flood methane hydrate reserves so the fuel can be released and brought to the surface.

Japan first extracted some of the material in 2013 but ended the effort due to sand from the seafloor clogging machinery, according to the country’s Ministry of Economy Trade and Tourism.

There are also environmen­tal concerns.

If methane hydrate leaks during the extraction process, it can increase greenhouse gas emissions. The fuel also could displace renewables such as solar and wind power, said David Sandalow, a former senior official with the U.S. State Department now at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy.

However, if it can be used without leaking, it has the potential to replace dirtier coal in the power sector.

“The climate implicatio­ns of producing natural gas hydrates are complicate­d. There are potential benefits, but substantia­l risks,” Sandalow said.

Commercial-scale production could be “transforma­tive for northeast Asia, particular­ly for Japan, which imports nearly all its hydrocarbo­n needs,” said James Taverner, a senior energy industry researcher at IHS Market, a London-based consulting firm.

The consensus within the industry is that commercial developmen­t won’t happen until at least 2030. Smaller scale output could happen as early as 2020, said Tim Collett, a scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey.

“The path to understand­ing when or if gas hydrates will be commercial­ly produced will need many similar and more extended testing efforts,” Collett said.

 ?? AP/Xinhua News Agency ?? Earlier this week, Chinese workers on a drilling platform in the South China Sea celebrate the successful trial extraction of natural gas from “combustibl­e ice” under the seafloor. Flags read “China Land Resource Bureau” and “Guangzhou Ocean Resource...
AP/Xinhua News Agency Earlier this week, Chinese workers on a drilling platform in the South China Sea celebrate the successful trial extraction of natural gas from “combustibl­e ice” under the seafloor. Flags read “China Land Resource Bureau” and “Guangzhou Ocean Resource...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States