In South China Sea, China Makes First Big Gas Discovery While Other Countries Look On
17
September, 2014
The
South China Sea is a body of water that gets a lot of attention. The
roughly 1.4-million-square-mile sea in the Pacific Ocean is claimed,
in parts, by China, Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia,
and Brunei. These claims matter for more than just bragging rights.
On top of being a major shipping thoroughfare — as much
as 50
percent of global oil tanker shipments pass through the sea — and
fishing hub, the World Bank estimates that
the South China Sea holds proven oil reserves of at least seven
billion barrels and an estimated 900 trillion cubic feet of natural
gas. For comparison, the United States has just over 300 trillion
cubic feet of proven natural gas reserves according
to the
EIA. China has about half that, at just over 150 trillion cubic feet.
It’s
not hard to comprehend why this buried energy treasure could
drastically elevate the stakes over who controls this jumbled part of
the world. With economies across Southeast Asia rapidly urbanizing
and economically growing, powering this change is at the forefront of
leaders’ concerns. This is especially the case in China — and an
announcement this week from the country’s offshore drilling
enterprise could be a turning point in the South China Sea’s role.
This
week, China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) announced its first
deepwater gas field discovery in the South China Sea. The discovery
was made in an area of the sea that is indisputably China’s,
however the rig the made it, rig 981, had been subject to a major
diplomatic row earlier this year when it was positioned within water
claimed by Vietnam. It is the first major discovery by the
controversial rig since it moved in July from its spot near the
Paracel Islands claimed by both Beijing and Hanoi. That deployment
had led to a series of anti-China riots in Vietnam in which at least
four people were killed. China recalled over 7,000 of its workers
over safety concerns.
While
the true significance of the discovery still requires testing, CNOOC
officials said it
could be quite substantial and that it nonetheless proves that China
“is now technologically capable of drilling in any place in the
entire South China Sea.”
If
the discovery of new significant retrievable gas reserves isn’t
worrisome enough for the diplomatic future of the South China Sea, on
Monday Vietnam and India agreed to expand cooperation in oil and gas
exploration and production in the sea — including in contested
waters. China has previously objected to this and reacted to the
announcement negatively.
“We
hold no objection to legitimate and lawful agreement between Vietnam
and a third country,” said Chinese
foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei. “But one thing is to be clear.
If such agreement concerns waters administered by China or if such
cooperation project is not approved by the Chinese government, then
we will be concerned about such an agreement and we will not support
it.”
China’s
President Xi Jinping is making his first visit to India this week and
the response was likely toned down in anticipation of outreach during
his trip.
Felix
Tan, a Beijing-based analyst for energy and resources consultant Wood
MacKenzie, told the
Associated Press that the find was China’s first without the
participation of foreign partners that in the past have included
companies such as Chevron and BP. While the discovery indicates the
possibility for China to find another way to limit reliance on
imported energy and lay claim to contested regions, it doesn’t mean
they still won’t need international expertise to reach the gas
about a mile under the sea. More than a mile undersea is considered
ultra-deep by industry standards, and the building of facilities is
extremely difficult and costly.
“These
new findings appear to be at a depth that verges on tricky to
impossible for the Chinese to develop on their own,” Jennifer M.
Harris, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign relations with
expertise in China and energy issues, told ThinkProgress. Harris said
this is partly political, and that the presence of non-Chinese
partners in China’s South China Sea endeavors lends “at least
some external validation to China’s contested maritime claims,”
but as the findings grow deeper and more complicated for CNOOC to
exploit, this is also a technological necessity.
Earlier
this month CNOOC invited foreign
firms to bid on an unprecedented number of oil and gas blocks off the
Chinese coast.
“Until
more is known about the cost curve for developing these new deposits,
its difficult to say much about how it might influence East Asia’s
overall regional energy picture, or other variables, like China’s
climate commitments,” she said. Harris warned that simply because
China is not a democracy doesn’t mean that their leaders aren’t
subject to similar levels of political pressure and lobbying prowess
from energy firms like CNOOC.
“If
China is to get more serious about specifying and enacting climate
goals, Beijing will need to prosecute its energy needs in a way that
begins to build up a set of domestic interests for clean energy,
similar to what CNOOC and China’s other major energy firms already
represent on the oil and gas side,” she said.
In
the meantime, China will likely continue to
rapidly construct artificial islands on reefs in disputed areas of
the South China Sea in an effort to solidify their territorial
claims. This is an undertaking that U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Daniel Russel, the senior U.S. diplomat for East Asia,
recently said is
destabilizing the situation and making it “harder, not easier, for
the claimants to resolve their claims peacefully.”
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