China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Oil starts flowing through China-Myanmar pipeline

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Project to help ensure greater energy security

The China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline started operations afteranoil tanker began offloading crude oil in the Southeast Asian country on Monday, which signals a new phase in energy cooperatio­n between the two countries and helps ensure China’s oil and gas imports.

The 140,000-metric-ton oil tanker Suezmax began offloading crude oil at Made Island oil port, the starting point of Myanmar.

The 771-kilometer pipeline ends in southweste­rn China’s Yunnan province.

The pipeline has a designed annual transmissi­on capacity of 22 million tons. Once the pipeline becomes fully operationa­l, Myanmar can also be provided with 2 million tons of crude oil through it annually.

China National Petroleum Corp, the country’s largest oil and gas producer, holds a 50.9 percent stake in the pipeline, while Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise owns the remainder.

“The pipeline well ensures China’s oil and gas import diversific­ation, following the the Suezmax, pipeline, in second China-Russia crude oil pipeline, which started operation last year in northeaste­rn China’s Heilongjia­ng province, and the China-Kazakhstan oil pipeline,” said Li Li, energy research director at ICIS China, a consulting company that provides analysis of China’s energy market.

With the newpipelin­e, China’s oil and gas imports will no longer have to pass through the Malacca Straits, a narrow channel that connects the Indian Ocean with the Pacific Ocean, Li said.

“The safety level of pipeline transmissi­on is much higher than for sea shipments, which will ensure a stable energy supply to China,” she said. “The economic benefits will grow as deliveries increase.”

The oil gateway will help ease the oil supply shortage in southweste­rn China, CNPC’s South-East Asia pipeline company said.

China and Myanmar signed an agreement on Monday, which allows CNPC to import oil via the Bay of Bengal in Myanmar and pump it through the pipeline to a newrefiner­y in Yunnan.

the annual transmissi­on capacity of crude oil that the pipeline is expected to have

 ?? ZHUANG BEINING / XINHUA ?? Workers connect a conduit to the 140,000-ton crude tanker to unload oil at Made Island oil port in Myanmar on Monday. Crude oil will then be transporte­d to China via the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline.
ZHUANG BEINING / XINHUA Workers connect a conduit to the 140,000-ton crude tanker to unload oil at Made Island oil port in Myanmar on Monday. Crude oil will then be transporte­d to China via the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline.

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