Shale
development threatens China's water
As
China readies for the water-intensive process of hydraulic
fracturing, or fracking, to tap into massive reserves of shale
natural gas, concerns are rising regarding the country's already
limited water supply.
UPI,
28
November, 2012
China
has 25.08 trillion cubic meters of exploitable onshore shale-gas
reserves, China's Ministry of Land Resources has said. But most of
that gas lies in areas plagued by water shortages, says a report in
China's Caixin newspaper.
To
extract natural gas from underground formations, 10 times more water
is needed compared to pumping equivalent amounts of oil and gas from
conventional wells, said Bao Shujing, deputy director of Sinopec
Petroleum Exploration and Development Research Institute's
Department of Non-Conventional Energy Technology Support.
As
part of its current five-year economic plan, China aims to produce
6.5 billion cubic meters of shale gas a year by the end of 2015.
To
reach that production goal, 1,380 wells need to be drilled,
requiring up to 13.8 million cubic meters of water, an industry
expert told Caixin. By contrast, China's entire industrial sector
uses about 35 million cubic meters of water annually.
The
World Bank says China's per capita water availability is only
one-quarter of the world average.
This
water deficit is a key issue for the development of China's shale
reserves says Lin Boqiang, an energy expert at Xiamen University.
"I
think the reserves estimates aren't realistic, because without water
how can you develop them?" he recently told the Financial
Times.
Contamination
of underground aquifers is also a risk with fracking.
Caixin
reported an unnamed source at China's Geological Exploration
Department as saying that as shale development increases, the
Chinese government will likely introduce specific, shale gas
drilling policies designed to protect the environment, particularly
groundwater.
Yet
an industry source said those policies are unlikely to be legally
binding.
Even
ahead of China's shale development, the Ministry of Environmental
Protection says that groundwater in 57 percent of the country's 660
cities is significantly polluted.
Environmentalists
have urged the Chinese government to put in place environmental
standards for the country's shale gas sector.
Yang
Fuqiang, a Beijing adviser on environment and climate change affairs
for the Natural Resources Defense Council, warns that such rules to
protect the environment are needed now before drilling accelerates.
In
the meantime, Beijing is trying to jump-start shale development.
In
its second auction for shale gas licenses last month, Beijing
secured 152 bids from 83 companies. And earlier this month, the
Chinese Ministry of Finance announced it was encouraging shale
development by offering subsidies of $2.10 per cubic feet of
production through 2015.
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