Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

W.Va. signs investment agreement with China energy firm

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia officials announced an agreement Thursday with China Energy Investment Corp. Ltd. for the company to invest $83.7 billion in shale gas developmen­t and chemical manufactur­ing in the state over 20 years.

State Commerce Secretary Woody Thrasher and China Energy president Ling Wen signed the memorandum in Beijing as part of the U.S.-China trade mission and an overall $250 billion of planned Chinese investment­s in the U.S. It came during President Donald Trump’s visit to Beijing.

West Virginia commerce officials said project planning already is underway and will focus on power generation, chemical manufactur­ing, and undergroun­d storage of natural gas liquids and derivative­s. The state was chosen for its position as an energy producer and its large undergroun­d shale gas reserves.

“West Virginia has actively sought direct foreign investment to strengthen and diversify our economy,” Mr. Thrasher said. Toyota, Hino Motors, Gestamp, Sogefi and other corporatio­ns with internatio­nal parent companies have created jobs and generated income in the state, and they expect China Energy to bring mutual benefits, he said.

Mr. Thrasher has revealed that early projects are two natural gas-fired power plants, likely in Harrison and Brooke counties, in a deal valued at more than $1.3 billion with constructi­on starting in the next six to eight months, according to the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce.

Since 2002, West Virginia University has been jointly researchin­g coal liquefacti­on with mining company Shenhua Group, which merged with energy company Guodian Group to form China Energy.

The university said it will work closely with state officials to help coordinate the investment, with funding focused on developing the proposed Appalachia storage and trading hub.

In August, the university released a study by researcher­s from the geological surveys in West Virginia, Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio of geologic formations that could be used by developers to build undergroun­d facilities to store natural gas liquids from gas wells.

Last year, the university and Shenhua signed a partnershi­p agreement to establish West Virginia as the priority area for the company’s U.S. investment­s, natural gas power plant developmen­t, shale gas developmen­t and upstream and downstream businesses, technologi­es in clean coal and power and training.

Brian Anderson, director of WVU’s Energy Institute, called Thursday’s memorandum “a game changer for the state.”

The Ohio Valley Environmen­tal Coalition and other environmen­tal groups oppose the storage hub, saying it would create a major petrochemi­cal region with public health dangers and contribute­to global warming.

 ?? Ng Han Guan/Associated Press ?? Smoke and steam spew from the sprawling complex that is a part of the Jiujiang steel and rolling mills in Qianan in northern China’s Hebei province.
Ng Han Guan/Associated Press Smoke and steam spew from the sprawling complex that is a part of the Jiujiang steel and rolling mills in Qianan in northern China’s Hebei province.

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