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Workers test pipelines at a natural gas storage centre under construction in Henan province. Photo: Reuters

China has massive reserves, so why can’t it meet demand for gas?

Production of the cleaner energy source has been ramped up amid pollution crackdown, but technical problems hinder efforts to meet the nation’s needs

China’s natural gas production is rising at the fastest pace in four years, but that will not be enough to meet the demand for the fuel that has been unleashed through a government programme to raise gas usage to clean the country’s polluted air.

Gas output in China rose to a record 147.4 billion cubic metres (bcm) last year, up 8.5 per cent from 2016, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed. Gas production is forecast to climb by between 6 and 8 per cent per year through 2020, according to researchers at China National Petroleum Corp.

But China’s war against smog has spawned voracious demand for the fuel that will keep it reliant on growing imports of liquefied natural gas or piped gas. The consumption surge is a result of a government drive that started last year to switch factories and millions of homes from coal to gas to cut harmful emissions.

“The momentum of this round of gas boom that started in late 2016 will extend well through this year,” said Li Yao, chief executive at SIA Energy.

China, the world’s largest energy consumer, was the world’s sixth-largest gas producer in 2016 after rising investments over the past 20 years.

However, consumption is surging even faster, climbing 15 per cent in 2017 to 237 bcm, according to the National Development and Reform Commission.
An oil production platform in the Tarim oilfield in the Xinjiang region of northwest China. The Tarim oilfield has huge petroleum and natural gas reserves. Photo: Xinhua

SIA expects China’s 2018 gas output to rise by about 8 per cent, or roughly 12 bcm, at the same time that gas demand will rise by 30 bcm, or 12.5 per cent, to 270 bcm.

That means that China in 2018 will need to import as much as 114 bcm of gas through pipelines and LNG combined. China’s gas imports last year surged by 28 per cent.

The trend of rising imports will continue, with SIA forecasting imports of 132 bcm will be required to meet 317 bcm of demand by 2020.

China should be able to produce more than enough natural gas to meet its own needs.

China holds the world’s largest reserves of shale natural gas, according the US Energy Information Administration. However, much of that gas is considered recoverable only if cost were not a constraint.

Furthermore, the country is among the top 10 holders of proven natural gas reserves, gas that could be produced at current prices, at 5.4 trillion cubic metres, according to the most recent BP Statistical Review.

Together, China’s three biggest gas basins, the Ordos in northern China, the Tarim in the Xinjiang region in the west, and Sichuan province in the southwest, make up 90 per cent of the country’s output, but each of them are beset with geological or technological difficulties.

State-owned PetroChina boosted production at the Ordos’ Changqing field to 36.9 bcm last year but only after drilling over 2,000 new wells. Output there peaked at 37 bcm in 2013.

“Changqing has entered a plateau and all we could do is to stabilise output,” said a PetroChina executive at the field.

Problems at the Tarim basin, which is the biggest of the three, stem from the depth of the wells and a lack of water for drilling operations and crews.

Tarim’s deepest field is 8km (5 miles) below the surface. Considered too dry for permanent habitation, fresh water is trucked to the wells in the region.
Workers at a construction site on a natural gas pipeline connecting China and Russia in Heilongjiang province. Photo: Reuters

In Sichuan, the gas produced from wells in the area, including Sinopec’s Puguang field and the Luojiazhai block where Chevron has invested, contains high amounts of sulphur that must be stripped out before being sold.

The shale resources are also considered costly and are hamstrung by mountainous geology, water scarcity and high land costs.

One promising shale field is at Fuling southwest of the city of Chongqing. Sinopec plans to raise output there to 10 bcm by 2020, up from six bcm last year. But the company struggles to break even there.

“Without government subsidy, our shale gas business is on the verge of loss-making,” said Ma Yongsheng, a Sinopec vice-president.

These problems will limit shale’s contributions in the short term.

SIA Energy forecasts shale output will be just 15 bcm by 2020, less than one-tenth of China’s total production.

“Shale gas will only become a leading driver for growth in the longer-term,” said Sun Wenyu, an analyst at CNPC.

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