China Daily

Nation set to reduce reliance on imports

- By ZHENG XIN

The proportion of shale gas in China’s energy mix is expected to grow continuous­ly, leading analysts to forecast the developmen­t of the clean fuel will reduce China’s dependency on energy imports and thus improve national energy security.

China has been heavily relying on oil and gas imports in recent years.

As the largest crude and gas importer worldwide, the country imported 440 million metric tons of crude oil in 2018, a year-on-year increase of 11 percent, and 125.4 billion cubic meters of gas, a year-onyear increase of 31.7 percent, according to figures from China National Petroleum Corp’s Economics and Technology Research Institute.

The dependence ratio on foreign oil and gas reached 69.8 percent and 45.3 percent respective­ly, and is expected to continue rising in 2019, the institute said.

However, China’s higher gasconsump­tion goals will be fulfilled by developing the shale gas sector, said Wang Lu, Asia-Pacific oil and gas analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

“Shale gas will play a big role in meeting China’s gas demand,” said Wang. “Shale gas output may reach 30 billion cu m by 2020, equal to 9 percent of the country’s total gas consumptio­n. The ratio can increase to 15 percent to 19 percent in 2030 as China reaches its target of producing 80 billion to 100 billion cu m of shale gas annually.”

While the country boasts the world’s largest recoverabl­e shale gas resources, the shale fields, which usually lie deep undergroun­d, in densely populated mountainou­s regions, are more fractured. These challenges lead to higher costs and complicati­ons in drilling.

However, domestic oil companies have been making significan­t progress with drilling technology and cost cutting in recent years, as China vows to support the sector’s developmen­t to shift its energy reliance from coal to gas.

According to Wang, fracking efficiency has enhanced by 50 percent and drilling time reduced by half, compared with the initial developmen­t period.

The cost of developing a shale gas well has been cut to 50 million yuan ($7.38 million), from 80 million to 100 million yuan in the industry’s early stages. China has developed shale resources at depths of less than 3,500 meters, she said.

“To reach the nation’s shale gas output targets for 2020 and 2030, the exploratio­n depth needs to go deeper,” Wang said.

According to energy consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie, 700 new wells will come onstream by 2020 at three key projects — Sinopec’s Fuling shale gas field, and CNPC’s Changning-Weiyuan field and Zhaotong field — all located in the country’s southwest, with a total cost of $5.5 billion.

Considerab­le progress has helped to unlock shale gas’ potential over the past decade. China’s shale gas output was 9 billion cu m in 2017, accounting for 4 percent of the country’s gas consumptio­n, while the figures for 2014 were 1.3 billion cu m and 0.7 percent respective­ly, according to Wang.

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