eFinanceMarkets
8年前
China opens Myanmar pipeline, speeding delivery of Mideast crude
A crude oil pipeline to southwestern China through neighboring Myanmar has started operations after years of delays, and the first oil tanker carrying 140K metric tons (~1M barrels) of crude began offloading oil for delivery into the 480-mile pipeline.
The pipeline allows China to import crude from the Middle East and Africa more quickly, without having to ship through the Straits of Malacca and into the South China Sea.
The pipeline ends in China’s Yunnan province, where PetroChina (NYSE:PTR) has built an oil refinery with the capacity to process 13M tons/year (~261K bbl/day) of crude; the company is in talks with Saudi Arabia about investing in the plant, which will begin operations in June.
Timothy Smith
9年前
China National Petroleum, parent of listed PetroChina (PTR -1.4%), is promises to sell several non-core businesses, including a chain of hotels and a taxi business, as state-owned companies come under pressure from the government to dispose of lucrative but often corrupt enterprises.
China’s two-year, anti-corruption drive has targeted the perks of office of government and state-owned enterprise employees, especially at CNPC, a former power base for now-disgraced energy and security czar Zhou Yongkang.
Also over the weekend, state oil company Cnooc (CEO -0.7%) pledged to "dismantle all entertainment equipment” and ban official receptions, dining and purchases of high-end consumer goods.
Vincent Milner
11年前
PetroChina Aims to Produce 92 Bcf of Shale Gas in 2015
PetroChina Company Ltd., China's largest oil and gas production firm, intends to produce 91.8079 billion cubic feet (Bcf) or 2.6 billion cubic meters (Bcm) of shale gas in 2015, Sun Longde, the company's vice president said, as quoted by local news agency Xinhua Monday.
Details
*MARINE 1*
17年前
US suppliers cash in on green drive
+ - 08:34, April 09, 2008
Comment Tell A Friend
Print Format Save Article
US equipment and service suppliers are cashing in on China's environmental protection and energy conservation push.
"In the past few years, Spencer has made deals to provide high-efficient blowers and gas boosters to help treat pollution. China's become its second largest buyer after the US," Feng Xiaohui, manager of DDI Industry International Inc (China), said.
One of DDI's main product ranges comes from Spencer Turbine Co, which has specialized in air and gas solutions since 1892.
Spencer makes special blowers and gas boosters including multistage centrifugal blowers, single stage centrifugal blowers and gas boosters.
"Although Spencer products cost about four times the others, many Chinese customers choose us after they've compared the products," Feng said yesterday.
"Spencer helps them reduce energy consumption by about 15 percent and the products are stable and need little maintenance."
The government set a target of cutting major pollutants by 10 percent from 2006 to 2010, and to do this the country needs technological and financial support from abroad.
"I believe in the next few years, Spencer will become a bigger part of China's green drive."
Spencer is trying to break into the country's booming petroleum, petrochemical, metallurgy, iron and steel industries.
"Participation in CIPPE is one of our trial efforts," Feng said. "But our performance depends on US technology exports and transfers into China. The US is not as bold as the EU in this area. Without technological support, it's useless for us to introduce equipment."
Another US company, TD Williamson, which focuses on pipeline solutions, is also trying to get on board the country's environment drive.
TD Williamson has worked with oil and gas behemoth PetroChina for nearly 20 years and will set up its first wholly owned company in Shanghai, Liu Zeyan, general manager of TD Williamson Inc (China), said.
The company provides a full range of pipeline equipment and services and expects to expand quickly in China.
"Energy demands will push China to lay out more pipeline, while security and conservation needs will see the focus shift to monitoring and maintenance," Liu said.