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China to see stable growth of oil output in 10 to
15 years
Chinese energy experts say the country is able to
keep a stable growth of domestic oil output in the next 10 to 15 years.
Zhai Guangming, an academician of the Chinese Academy
of Engineering, said at the forum on China's energy strategy that from 2006
to 2010, China's annual oil output is able to reach 185 million to 195 million
tons.
China is able to keep such an output for some 10 to
15 years, he said.
China produced 182 million tons of crude oil in 2005
with its dependency on overseas crude oil and oil products reaching 42.9
percent.
According to Zhai, China is expected to see a stable
growth of its proved oil reserves for at least 10 years.
Zhu Jianjun, a researcher with China National
Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), China's largest oil producer, said that while
there is great potential for more oil reserves to be discovered, China finds it
more and more difficult in making new discoveries.
Many potentially proved resources are distributed in
geologically complicated regions such as deserts, loess tablelands and deep
ocean, making higher requirements for oil exploration technology and investment,
said Zhu.
According to Zhu, major oil fields in east China has
entered the output reduction phase while new fields in west China and offshore
areas are substituting those in the east to become major oil suppliers of the
country.
To make full development of old oil fields in the east and strengthening oil mining in the west and offshore areas, China is able to see its crude oil output surpass 200 million tons by 2020 and remain at 170 million tons by 2030, said Zhu.
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