BEIJING, June 13 (Xinhua) -- South Africa's Sasol, the world's biggest
producer of motor fuel from coal, and China's top coal company Shenhua Group
will jointly produce motor fuel from coal in China in 2016, a Sasol official
said Friday.
Feasibility studies of two Coal to Liquids (CTL) projects in northwest
China, jointly invested by Sasol and Shenhua, are going smoothly and expected to
be completed by the end of 2009, said Sasol's chief executive officer Pat Davies
at a press conference in Beijing.
The two projects, one in Shaanxi Province and the other in Ningxia Hui
Autonomous Region, will each be able to produce 80,000barrels per day, or 3.4
million tons annually of diesel, naphtha, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and jet
fuel.
A Sasol CTL project usually costs 5 to 7 billion U.S. dollars. Shenhua and
Sasol will each hold a half of the projects' equities, said Sasol's general
manager Lean Strauss.
Davies said he expected the long-term crude oil price to hover around 80
U.S. dollars per barrel, in which case it was economically competitive to
liquefy coal to motor fuel.
The major concern for Sasol in China was the government price curbs on
refined oil products, said Strauss.
"We have been discussing the problem with the Chinese government and we
expect a price more closely linked to the international market," he said.
With surging oil demand and the world's third largest coal reserves, China
has heard more voices on turning coal into oil products as world crude oil
prices rocket.
China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the country's
top economic planner, issued a circular in 2006, urging for the "healthy
development" of industries that turn coal into oil or oil substitutes such as
methanol and alkene.
It raised the threshold for coal liquefaction projects to a minimum annual
output capacity of 3 million tons for fear of excessive production.
A major coal producer with government permission to make trial of coal
liquefaction, Shenhua is expected to produce China's first barrel of liquid fuel
from coal in September using self-owned technology known as direct coal
liquefaction.
Chen Liming, Sasol China executive vice president, said Sasol and Shenhua's
technologies should not be compared simply as the latter was yet to be
industrialized.
A Shenhua source said the company's CTL technology would be profitable as
long as the international oil price was over 40 U.S. dollars per barrel. Chen
didn't disclose the cost of Sasol's CTL technology.
The feasibility research of Shenhua and Sasol's joint projects was launched
in 2006 and would cost 300 million U.S. dollars, Strauss said.
He said the Front End Engineering Design (FEED) and the Final Investment
Decision (FID) would be made within two years after the feasibility studies were
finished.
Shenhua has another coal liquefaction project with the energy giant Royal
Dutch/Shell Group.
Listed in Johannesburg and New York, Sasol has a current market value of 38
billion U.S. dollars.