Global Times

China, Russia inaugurate east natural gas pipeline

- By Ma Jingjing

Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin inaugurate­d the China-Russia east route natural gas pipeline by video link-up on Monday, sending a signal that energy and cooperatio­n in other sectors between the two countries are becoming the key to boosting multilater­alism.

Entering service the same day, the pipeline will help Russia export up to 38 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year to China, according to an article posted on the China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) website on Monday.

That’s almost one-third of China’s total natural gas imports in 2018. About 5 billion cubic meters of natural gas from Russia will be delivered to China in 2020 and will be gradually increased to 38 billion cubic meters per year, the article said.

CNPC is responsibl­e for the

constructi­on and management of the project within China: Stretching from Russia’s Siberia to China’s Yangtze River Delta, the pipeline spans 8,000 kilometers, of which 5,111 kilometers fall within Chinese borders.

A China-Russia west route and China-Far East pipelines are also under discussion, the article said.

Win-win deal

Mutual benefit drove the two countries’ energy developmen­t strategies.

A “rapidly rising China needs a stable and reliable energy supply, while an increasing­ly powerful Russia also needs to participat­e in the world’s largest market,” the CNPC article said.

The pipeline will help stabilize China’s natural gas supply and guarantee the country’s energy security, especially if the situation ever changes for ocean transporta­tion of natural gas in certain waters like the South China Sea, Jin Lei, an associate professor at the Beijing-based China University of Petroleum, told the Global Times on Monday.

“There is a China-Central Asia natural gas pipeline system in northweste­rn China, a China-Myanmar oil and gas pipeline in the southweste­rn region and about 20 liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals in the eastern region,” Jin said.

The constructi­on of the China-Russia pipeline will make up for the lack of a cross-border natural gas pipeline in northeaste­rn China, he said, noting that the China-Russia pipe is a strategic energy supply channel.

China is the world’s largest natural gas importer. In 2018, China imported 90.39 million tons (about 125.9 billion cubic meters) of natural gas, data from the General Administra­tion of Customs shows.

The annual import of 38 billion cubic meters from Russia would account for nearly one-third of China’s annual total natural gas imports, and Russia is expected to be China’s largest supplier.

Thanks to Chinese demand, the pipeline will become an important channel for Russian exports, Jin said, especially if problems impede Russia’s natural gas exports to Western Europe.

Europe is a big export market for Russian gas, with Gazprom alone exporting about 202 billion cubic meters to European countries and Turkey in 2018, Reuters reported.

But those exports can suffer during political tensions. The US and European countries oppose constructi­on of Nord Stream 2, a Russian gas pipeline to Western Europe, over security concerns, The Los Angeles Times reported in June.

As a major resources export economy, Russia saw its natural gas production hit a record 725 billion cubic meters in 2018, of which 225 billion cubic meters were exported, Xinhua reported in January, citing Russian energy minister Alexander Novak.

The project deepens China-Russia relations, Chinese observers noted.

The US has become a net exporter of oil for the first time in decades, noted Wang Yiwei, a director of China’s Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs at Renmin University in Beijing.

China-Russia energy and financial cooperatio­n boosts multilater­alism.

“Russia is not only a business partner, but more of a strategic partner in politics and diplomacy,” he told the Global Times on Monday.

The success of the pipeline project will step up China-Russia cooperatio­n in other aspects, including regional cooperatio­n and cyber-security, he said.

“Against the internatio­nal backdrop that the US continues to contain China by even sacrificin­g its own interests, China supporting Russia is supporting itself,” Wang said.

 ?? Photos: AFP ?? A combinatio­n photo shows Chinese President Xi Jinping (top on TV screen) and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin (right on bottom) inaugurate the China-Russia east route natural gas pipeline by video link on Monday.
Photos: AFP A combinatio­n photo shows Chinese President Xi Jinping (top on TV screen) and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin (right on bottom) inaugurate the China-Russia east route natural gas pipeline by video link on Monday.

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