China Daily Global Edition (USA)

The coming green power tide

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Rising use of natural gas brings benefits to consumers, industry and economy

Millions of residents in northern Chinese cities will literally breathe easy this winter as the air will likely be a lot cleaner, and smog a lot thinner, given that natural gas will increasing­ly replace dirtier coal as power plant fuel in the region.

Natural gas sales are expected to rise more than 20 percent to 13.9 billion yuan ($2.1 billion) this year, according to China National Petroleum Corp or CNPC, the country’s largest oil and gas supplier and producer.

Consumptio­n of natural gas, which emits 50 percent less carbon dioxide than coal, will rise as demand is set to surge. China’s commitment to smog-free air and green power is good news for not just electricit­y consumers and green campaigner­s, but those who thrive on gas imports.

The efforts to ensure adequate supplies of natural gas will involve creation or expansion of infrastruc­ture like pipelines, ports with suitable terminals, storage facilities and transporta­tion networks.

Existing Chinese investment­s in overseas energy assets like oil and gas fields will likely be augmented, and fresh targets identified.

Given the implicatio­ns for the entire economy, winter is warming the cockles of the power industry players’ hearts. Nowhere is this more palpable than in the Chinese capital.

Downtown Beijing will shutter four major coal-fired power plants in its vicinity, and keep itself warm in the winter with four gas-fired plants at a cost of around 50 billion yuan.

Hebei, one of the most polluting provinces in northern China, has also phased out 33,600 small coal-fired boilers.

Tianjin, one of China’s four municipali­ties besides Beijing, Shanghai and Chongqing, said it planned to further cut coal consumptio­n and increase the supply of natural gas for both indoor heating and vehicle fuel purposes.

Analysts believe China’s determinat­ion to move away from coal and other fossil fuels to address air pollution will be a long-term positive for the natural gas sector.

Joseph Jacobelli, a senior analyst tracking Asia utilities at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, said although clean energy won’t completely replace coalfired power generation at least for the next 30 years, the share of gas-fired generation in the overall electricit­y mix will increase steadily.

“We’re already seeing that clean generation accounts for a greater proportion of newly installed capacity compared with the coal-fired ones.”

On the back of continued policy support from Beijing and the industry’s coal-to-gas transition, the liquefied natural gas or LNG market in China has witnessed sharp growth this year.

According to the CNPC Research Institute of Economics and Technology, LNG consumptio­n reached 167.6 billion cubic meters during the January-September period, up 16.6 percent year-onyear. Full-year growth in 2016 was 7 percent.

The peak season of winter, and even the period between summer and winter months, witnessed a pick-up in gas consumptio­n as well, said Duan Zhaofang, chief engineer of the natural gas market research department of the institute.

Power industry insiders believe the demand will continue to surge in the coming years. Marc Howson, director of the LNG market developmen­t division of S&P Global Platts, an energy industry informatio­n service, said Chinese LNG imports will continue to grow toward 50 million tons in 2018.

China’s LNG imports rose 32.8 percent to 26.06 million tons in 2016.

Contracts for LNG supply to China, mainly from western and eastern Australia, and the US Gulf Coast, are up nearly 50 percent year-on-year this year as the government steps up efforts for cleaner burning fuel, he said.

S&P Global Platts forecasts that by 2018, China will surpass South Korea to become the world’s second largest LNG importer, trailing only Japan.

As for natural gas, domestic output rose from 50 billion cu m in 2005 to 135 billion cu m in 2016.

China’s natural gas use will exceed 360 billion cu m by 2020, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic planner.

That would be more than 10 percent of China’s energy consumptio­n by 2020, up from 7 percent now, according to the commission.

By 2040, China is expected to import as much as Japan, about 311.5 million cu m of natural gas a day, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

Rising demand for non-fossil fuel has prompted the country’s energy behemoths to step up efforts to secure adequate supplies of LNG through imports. They are continuing negotiatio­ns with some resource-rich Central Asian nations for additional stocks.

Qu Guangxue, spokesman for CNPC, which accounts for over 70 percent of the natural gas supplied in China, said the company’s natural gas demand is expected to reach 81.3 billion cu m this year, up 11.7 percent from 2016.

According to CNPC, the China-Central Asia natural gas pipeline that it built, and which runs through China, Turkmenist­an, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, will have transporte­d a total of 200 billion cu m of natural gas by the end of this month since 2009, equivalent to the total annual natural gas consumptio­n of China or 11 years of natural gas supply for Beijing.

China started importing natural gas through a pipeline from Turkmenist­an in 2010 and has since then imported natural gas also

 ??  ?? An LNG container ship docks at Dalian port, Liaoning province. China is importing more natural gas to satisfy the rising demand for cleaner fuel. XINHUA
An LNG container ship docks at Dalian port, Liaoning province. China is importing more natural gas to satisfy the rising demand for cleaner fuel. XINHUA
 ??  ?? Amount of natural gas that will be used annually in China by 2020
Amount of natural gas that will be used annually in China by 2020
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States