China Daily

CNPC jolts things up with new charging venture

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

China National Petroleum Corp announced on Monday the establishm­ent of a new energy company with its business covering battery manufactur­ing, new energy vehicle sales and charging piles.

The business of the company, with a registered capital of 60 million yuan ($8.34 million), also includes new energy vehicle accessorie­s sales, power transmissi­ons, distributi­on and control equipment manufactur­ing, as well as the manufactur­e and sales of photovolta­ic equipment and components, according to Tianyancha, a corporate informatio­n-sharing site.

CNPC, together with Shanghai Qiyuan Green Power Tech Co Ltd and Shanghai Enneagon Energy Tech Co Ltd, hold shares in the joint venture.

The company said earlier that it aims to build over 1,000 charging stations by 2025 in China, having built 203 as of September.

An analyst said China’s energy giants have been expanding their investment in low-carbon businesses including renewables, hydrogen and electric mobility to further facilitate the country’s goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2060.

Wei Hanyang, a power market analyst at BloombergN­EF, said CNPC has selected a wise route to go green by targeting renewable energy to benchmark with global oil majors and competitor­s.

NEVs will eventually replace internal combustion engines in the China market, and if left behind in this transition, oil companies can lose their competitiv­e edge over the long term, Wei said.

In September, CNPC joined SAIC Motor Corp, battery maker Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co Ltd and China Petrochemi­cal Corp — also known as Sinopec, the world’s largest refiner by volume — to set up a Shanghai-based JV to supply swappable batteries for electric vehicles.

The JV, Shanghai Jieneng Zhidian New Energy Technology, is expected to set up about 40 battery swapping stations in cities such as Shanghai and Beijing as well as Guangdong province’s Guangzhou and Shenzhen this year. The aim is to put about 300 such stations into operation by the end of 2023 and about 3,000 by 2025.

The firm will also research swappable battery technology as well as provide big data services with its business focusing on leasing power batteries, according to official business registrati­on portal www.qcc.com.

Luo Zuoxian, head of intelligen­ce and research at the Sinopec Economics and Developmen­t Research Institute, said domestic oil majors have been stepping up developmen­t of new energy assets in recent years, while their widespread gas stations nationwide also give them an edge as pioneers in the new energy industry.

The oil majors can not only provide physical sites, but also take over the supply of clean energy via battery swapping based on their existing filling station networks, and they should further extend the industry chain of new energy transporta­tion, including developing hydrogen refueling stations, Luo said.

Sinopec and CNPC aim to switch to new energies and transform petrol stations into “integrated energy service stations” where drivers can either charge or swap their vehicles’ batteries.

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