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Home›China›Beijing finds sizable natural gas field in South China Sea 

Beijing finds sizable natural gas field in South China Sea 

By -
February 11, 2015
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China said it recent gas discovery in the politically volatile South China Sea could yield 100 billion cubic meters of natural gas, underlining Beijing’s determination to extract resources from waters claimed by several nations.
The Lingshui 17-2 gas field was discovered 150 kilometers south of China’s southernmost island of Hainan, and the Ministry of Land and Resources has approved it as a large-scale find, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
It cited the country’s main offshore oil and gas producer, China National Offshore Oil Corp. Calls to the company’s press office rang unanswered yesterday.
Xizhou Zhou, senior director and head of China for IHS Energy, said that 100 billion cubic meters was a “decent amount but not that substantial,” and equivalent to about six to seven months of Chinese gas supply currently.
“In addition, new discoveries often take years to develop, so by the time this gas starts to flow, the Chinese gas market could be much bigger than it is today,” he said.
Petroleum reserves and fisheries are among the resources at stake in disputes over the South China Sea, which is one of the world’s busiest shipping routes and a patchwork of overlapping claims by governments including China, the Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan.
China claims virtually all of the South China Sea.
China National Offshore Oil Corp.’s exploration rig made the discovery about a month after it withdrew in July from a tense maritime standoff with Vietnam in the latter’s exclusive economic zone.
China’s placing of the rig in contested waters off Vietnam two months earlier triggered a wave of violent protests among Vietnamese, leaving at least two Chinese workers dead and 140 injured.
The gas field has a depth of about 1,500 meters, which is at the extreme cusp of what the industry considers a deep-water field, or those from 400 to 1,500 meters. Greater than 1,500 meters would be ultra-deep, where extraordinary pressures make the building of facilities extremely difficult. AP

philippines protests china land reclamation at another reef

The Philippines has protested Chinese land reclamation at a disputed reef in the South China Sea, saying it violates Manila’s exclusive economic zone. Foreign Affairs Department spokesman Charles Jose said yesterday a diplomatic protest was handed to a Chinese Embassy representative on Feb. 4 urging Beijing to stop the land reclamation at Panganiban Reef, also called Mischief Reef.
China occupied the reef in 1995, and later expanded stilt structures into a concrete building several stories high. The Philippines protested both moves at the time. Jose said it appears China is constructing an artificial island at the reef.
Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines have separately protested Chinese land reclamation at a number of reefs in the Spratly Islands, fearing they could be used for air, naval or logistic bases to bolster China’s territorial claims far from its mainland.
Two other diplomatic protests made on Feb. 4 were earlier announced. They involved the alleged ramming of three Philippine fishing boats by a Chinese coast guard ship at Scarborough Shoal and the reported collection of endangered giant clams by Chinese fishermen which also destroyed coral outcrops at the shoal.

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