BEIJING, April 3 -- The country should look
increasingly offshore to shore up dwindling onshore production, oil companies
were told on Monday.
"The current offshore oil and gas exploration and production should focus on the Bohai Bay basin and the Pearl
River estuary as the top priority," Pan Jiping, a senior researcher with the
Ministry of Land and Resources, said at China Offshore Summit 2007.
"As for deep-sea exploration, the firms should invest
more in blocks in the northern part of the South China Sea," Pan said.
More than 80 percent of China's proven offshore oil
reserves are located in the Bohai Bay basin, and the country needs to beef up
exploration in the Pearl River estuary, the South China Sea and the southern
Yellow Sea, he said.
The southern Yellow Sea is the only offshore area
where no major oil and gas reserves have been discovered so more efforts should
be made there, Pan emphasized.
The ministry is expected to publish an appraisal of
China's overall offshore fossil fuel reserves soon, giving more detailed
guidelines to oil companies.
"We are also considering reforming the current
project review and approval format to give more opportunities to international
players. We may adopt more international practices, such as bidding, to allocate
mining rights," Pan stressed.
He called on Chinese offshore companies to develop
technologies for deep-sea oil and gas exploration.
Han Xuegong, a senior consultant with China National
Petroleum Company (CNPC), the country's largest oil and gas producer, noted that
given soaring energy demand and the decreasing production in oil fields located
in the eastern part of the country, it is natural for national conglomerates to
make more efforts offshore.
"It is true that developing offshore reserves
involves higher risks and requires more investment and technical expertise. But
given the current global oil prices, it is absolutely worth the risk.
"That is mainly why CNPC and China National Offshore
Oil Corp (CNOOC) are marching offshore," Han said.
Both CNPC and China's top offshore oil company CNOOC
announced on Monday that they are developing deep-water drilling
platforms with a 3,000-meter extraction capacity.
Zhang Weiping, deputy chief economist of CNOOC, said
that 70 percent of oil reserves in the South China Sea are in deep water, which
require deep-sea drilling capacity.
(Source: China Daily)