Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese tout sea’s gas field as sizable

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BEIJING — China said its recent gas discovery in the South China Sea could yield about 130 billion cubic yards of natural gas.

The Lingshui 17-2 gas field was discovered about 50 miles south of China’s southernmo­st island of Hainan, and the Ministry of Land and Resources has approved it as a large-scale find, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

It cited the country’s main offshore oil and gas producer, China National Offshore Oil Corp. Calls to the company’s press office rang unanswered Tuesday.

Xizhou Zhou, senior director and head of China for IHS Energy, said that 130 billion cubic yards was a “decent amount but not that substantia­l,” and equivalent to about six to seven months of Chinese gas supply.

“In addition, new discoverie­s often take years to develop, so by the time this gas starts to flow, the Chinese gas market could be much bigger than it is today,” he said.

Petroleum reserves and fisheries are among the resources at stake in disputes over the South China Sea, which is one of the world’s busiest shipping routes and a patchwork of overlappin­g claims by government­s including China, the Philippine­s, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan.

China claims virtually all of the South China Sea.

China National Offshore Oil Corp.’s exploratio­n rig made the discovery about a month after it withdrew in July from a tense maritime standoff with Vietnam in the latter’s exclusive economic zone.

China’s placing of the rig in contested waters off Vietnam two months earlier triggered a wave of violent protests among Vietnamese.

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