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Page added on August 18, 2014

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China’s National Effort in Oil and Gas Fracking Fails

China’s National Effort in Oil and Gas Fracking Fails thumbnail

China’s “economic miracle” faces an existential threat now that the nation is the world’s largest importer of oil. The Chinese central authorities mandated a $275-billion crash investment in fracking to develop cheap energy from China’s 30 trillion cubic meters of natural gas trapped in the world’s largest shale fields. But China’s effort to knockoff America’s oil and gas fracking boom appears to have failed. China seems doomed to continue to destroy its industrial competitiveness by relying on high-cost energy imports.

The head of China’s National Energy Administration (CNEA) quietly admitted last week that the country’s bold effort to follow the United States’s lead in launching an oil and gas boom based on hydraulic fracking of shale is failing. CNEA central planners promised domestic fracking would produce 80 billion cubic meters of cheap natural gas a year by 2020. But CNEA’s estimate for domestic gas production has been revised down to just 30 billion cubic meters per year.

China became the largest global energy consumer in 2010 and passed the U.S. as the largest net oil importer in 2014. China relies on coal for 70% of its energy needs and 80% of its electricity. State-run Shenhua Energy is the world’s largest coal producer, and at 3.8 billion tons last year, China burned almost as much coal as the 4.3 billion tons for the rest of the world.

But smog from coal burning has skyrocketed along with China’s economic growth. China’s burning coal as its primary energy source explains why CO2 emissions grew by 44% over the last five years. The Earth Quality Institute ranked China the number one emitter of CO2 with 2,395 million tons produced in 2013. According to the World Bank, 16 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities are now in China.

In July of 2013, China announced a five-year, $275-billion investment focused on natural gas development to curb air pollution from burning coal. The central authorities also announced the “Clean Air Action Plan” in September as a mandate to convert coal power plants to natural gas to service key urban centers such as Beijing by 2020.

China deferred natural gas production due to inadequate pipeline infrastructure and an abundance of cheaper coal deposits. But China planned to raise annual consumption from 162 billion cubic meters of natural gas in 2013 to 400 billion cubic meters in 2024.

At more than 30 trillion cubic meters, China contains the world’s largest shale gas reserves. The central authorities expected to use fracking to knockoff America’s shale oil and gas boom, according to Stratfor Global Intelligence. China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. tried developing shale fields with domestic equipment and personnel but has not succeeded due to extreme technical and geological challenges.

China’s Yanchang Petroleum acquired Canada’s Novus Energy in January to develop gas from Shaanxi and neighboring Sichuan shale basins. But the area is mountainous and crisscrossed with deep earthquake faults. This not only limits horizontal drilling, but it also raised fears in the region that recent deadly earthquakes were caused by fracking. The combination of the local population’s environmental opposition and very high cost of shale gas development is limiting shale gas production.

Chevron spent $6.4 billion in China in hopes of bringing in a 12-billion-cubic-meters-per-year supply of Sichuan shale gas online by 2010. But production has been delayed until 2015 because of the area’s geological complexity. Chevron is now in a disagreement with its partners Petro China Company and the Chinese government on how to finish the project that is 36% over original estimated cost.

Beijing is cracking down on corruption at its state-owned energy giants PetroChina, Sinopec, and China National Petroleum Corp by taking away the companies’ power and influence as retaliation for failing to increase gas supplies, according to Stratfor.

In desperation to gain more foreign partners to develop natural gas, China has offered to set up an incentive program that includes a value-added tax refunds, direct subsidies, and waivers on import tariffs for equipment. China is raising the wholesale price of natural gas for traditionally subsidized industrial users by 20.5% and promises to completely deregulate all subsidized gas prices by September 1st to fund gas projects.

Unable to substantially increase domestic gas production, China has been forced to secure large volumes of pipeline natural gas from Turkmenistan and Myanmar. In May, China signed a $400 billion deal with Gazprom for 38 billion cubic meters a year of natural gas for 30 years.

China is also building import terminals to handle almost 70 billion cubic meters of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and has plans to add another 80 billion cubic meters. But it is doubtful that LNG supply contracts can come online fast, and the nation may be forced to try to buy much more expensive LNG on spot market.

China’s rising energy needs accounted for one third of the world’s oil consumption growth in 2013 and is projected grow at the same rate in 2014. The rising cost of imported energy is destroying China’s industrial competitiveness and helps explain why exports fell from 39% to 26% of China’s GDP over the last five years. But with national effort to produce oil & gas by fracking of shale deposits now a failure, China’s economic miracle is increasingly threatened by the high cost of imported energy.

breitbart



6 Comments on "China’s National Effort in Oil and Gas Fracking Fails"

  1. MSN Fanboy on Mon, 18th Aug 2014 7:59 pm 

    Im sure it will work: albeit at a higher price.

  2. Makati1 on Mon, 18th Aug 2014 9:12 pm 

    breitbart is new to me so I looked it up. Google had nothing. I finally found this:

    “(Sarah)Palin recently made headlines with an op-ed piece published on conservative website Breitbart.com…”

    I’m suspicious when I try to find out who owns something like this and cannot. It appears to be owned by Fox News but I could not prove it. Maybe someone else can ask the right question?

  3. MKohnen on Tue, 19th Aug 2014 12:06 am 

    China has overcome many challenges on its way to becoming an economic superpower. This is just one of the hurdles they face. Some of my family work in Alberta with the oil patch, and they confirm how heavy the Chinese presence in the Canadian oil patch is becoming. If they don’t have the technology yet, I’m sure they will soon acquire it. Of course, if Nony gets his wish and prices fall, the Chinese might be able to buy up a lot of the US equipment at bargin basement prices.

  4. Davy on Tue, 19th Aug 2014 6:03 am 

    Listening to the geology specialist here I see the shale phenomenon as finding a sweet spot in the US. It took sweet spots above and below ground and the US has that. The existing infrastructure to transport, drill rigs/personnel, abundant capex, CB repressed interest rate, and finally the Marketing mad men on Wall Street. Bellow ground according to what I read here there has been some good sweet spots. We also know from our specialist here, Short, a significant amount of this shale product has been used with the tar sand product from Canada. We have the infrastructure in place to refine and use the shale gas in its various industrial applications. The US is generally blessed with water resources enough in the right place to make fracking economical. In this respect the high cost of shale production was diluted with all those other costs to the process that if lacking make shale resources prohibitively expensive. We know there is also the debt factor involved with shale. This will in the end dilute the overall profitability of the resources when we look in the review mirror. Will this debt be paid back? We must consider the money already lost with companies that jumped in too late to profit from the early “gold rush”. China on the other hand may have the resource but the above ground aspect of the resource is undeveloped. The infrastructure investment would be huge. China is among the worst placed of the shale gas holding countries with the necessary water resources. China is now a country with multiple economic issues facing it. Of all the large economies China has the most significant issues facing it that slap it upside the head with limits of growth and diminishing returns. China more than all other large economies must have significant growth to hold together economically. This is China’s biggest problem and one that will sink China in a world of collapsing growth. There is also the issue of Russian gas. It may just be cheaper to pipe in Russian gas for China.

  5. rockman on Tue, 19th Aug 2014 6:22 am 

    Not a terrible article but they still make the same foolish mistake: “At more than 30 trillion cubic meters, China contains the world’s largest shale gas reserves.” No…they don’t. They may have a very large RESOURCE of shale gas. How much is “technically recoverable remains to be seen. And then there’s the next culling factor: “economically recoverable reserves”. I’ll guess it will take at last a decade (probably longer) to reach anything close to a reliable number when you consider the ongoing debates over US shale gas reserves given how much more data we have here.

  6. JuanP on Tue, 19th Aug 2014 10:01 am 

    I always expected shale development to be very complicated outside the USA.
    The Chinese expectations were too optimistic like 90% of human expectations tend to be according to research. We are an optimistic species at this time.
    I keep expecting a very slow development of non USA shale at today’s prices. If oil were to go up to $150 or $200, something some people think not possible, then things would accelerate.

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