Gazprom ready to more than double Russia's gas supplies to China — CEO
Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said Tuesday that Russia's gas deliveries to China may shortly rise to 60 and even 100 billion cubic meters a yea
7
October, 2014
ST. PETERSBURG, October 7. /TASS/. Russian energy giant Gazprom is ready to boost natural gas supplies to China to 100 billion cubic meters a year in the near term, Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said on Tuesday.
“Gazprom
has entered this market quite recently by signing a very advantageous
contract, which will yield $400 billion for us during 30 years,”
Miller said at the St. Petersburg international gas forum.
“In
fact, this is only the beginning. The prospects of supplies to the
Chinese market, if we comment on them, are simply huge. We say that
the volumes of our deliveries may shortly rise to 60 and even to 100
billion cubic meters a year,” the Gazprom CEO said.
While
the Asia-Pacific region is a market based on liquefied natural gas
and the LNG share dominates the local gas balance structure, it is
possible to forecast that “the proportion of pipeline gas on the
Asia-Pacific and Chinese markets will be rising ever more
considerably,” Miller said.
The
Gazprom chief said that “intra-regional competition for resources
will presumably intensify” in the Asia-Pacific region.
Russia-China
gas contract
The
$400 billion contract signed between Gazprom and China’s CNPC in
May 2014 envisages the delivery of 38 billion cubic meters of natural
gas to China annually for a period of 30 years.
Natural
gas will be supplied to China via the Power of Siberia gas pipeline,
the construction of which was launched by President Vladimir Putin on
September 1.
May
21, 2014, Gazprom and CNPC have signed a deal on gas supplies to
China
Power
of Siberia gas pipeline
The
Power of Siberia gas pipeline estimated at $21.3 billion is intended
to pump 61 billion cubic meters of natural gas annually and will
stretch over a distance of 3,968 km (2,465 miles).
The
pipeline is designed to pump natural gas from the giant Chayanda oil
and gas condensate deposit in Yakutia in northeast Russia and the
Kovykta gas condensate field in the Irkutsk Region in Eastern
Siberia. The Power of Siberia will run along the operational East
Siberia - Pacific oil pipeline, crossing marshlands, mountainous and
seismically active areas.
The
first stage envisages the construction of the
Yakutia-Khabarovsk-Vladivostok trunk gas pipeline. During the second
stage, the Irkutsk gas production center based on the Kovykta deposit
will be connected with the Yakutia center based on the Chayanda
field.
The
gas pipeline’s first stage is scheduled to be commissioned in 2017.
The
Chayanda oil and gas condensate field in the Lensky district of
Yakutia was discovered in 1989. The field, one of Russia’s largest
undeveloped deposits, holds about 1.45 trillion cubic meters of
natural gas and 93 million tons of liquid hydrocarbons. The field is
expected to produce up to 25 billion cubic meters of natural gas and
at least 1.5 million tons of oil annually.
The
Kovykta gas condensate deposit discovered in 1987 is located in the
north of the Irkutsk Region. The deposit’s reserves are estimated
at 1.9 trillion cubic meters of natural gas, 2.3 billion cubic meters
of helium and 115 million tons of liquid gas condensate.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.