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BEIJING, May 29 -- China can maintain a healthy
oil supply with new discoveries in its sea and land-locked western regions,
despite growing exploration difficulties, experts claim.
Zhai Guangming, an academician of the Chinese Academy
of Engineering, said China's annual oil output could reach 185 million to 195
million tons.
Speaking at this weekend's forum on the nation's
energy strategy, he said:"China is able to maintain such an output for some 10
to 15 years."
China produced 182 million tons of crude oil in 2005
with its dependency on overseas oil and oil products reaching 42.9 per cent.
But according to Zhai, China can expect to see a
stable growth of its proved oil reserves for at least 10 years.
Zhu Jianjun, research division director of the China
National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), China's largest oil producer, said that
there is potential for more oil to be discovered, despite the increasing
difficulty in oil exploration.
By fully developing old oil fields in the east and
increasing drilling in the west and offshore areas, China's annual crude oil
output could surpass 200 million tons by 2020 and remain at 170 million tons by
2030, said Zhu.
The National Development and Reform Commission has
predicated that China will consume 330-350 million tons of oil by 2010.
"We should step up efforts to produce as much as
possible while strengthening energy-saving measures," said Zhu.
He said major oil fields in East China have entered
the output reduction phase and new fields in the west and offshore are becoming
the country's major suppliers.
Many potential resources are spread across
geologically-complicated regions such as deserts, loess plateaus and offshore in
deep water, and will need more advanced oil exploration technology to extract,
he said.
Zhu warned that China's oil supply is facing risks,
which need to be solved through increased domestic production.
"The risk isn't a shortage, but uneven distribution,
which is causing instability in the world oil market," he said, adding that
soaring oil prices will be the first hurdle China faces.
Statistics indicate that China spent US$43 billion
importing oil in 2004, rising to over US$50 billion in 2005.
Zhu predicted that China's spending on oil imports
will keep rising as its imports increase and the international oil price remains
sky high.
Transport also poses a problem for China's oil
supply, he said.
Currently, more than 70 per cent of China's oil
imports pass through the Malacca Straits in Southeast Asia.
"As the channel is now near to capacity, other
channels have to be found," said Zhu.
To counter the risks, China must increase its
domestic oil and natural gas supply as well as developing overseas sources to
ensure diversified supply and transportation channels, he said.
(Source: China Daily) |