Business | Oil & Gas
Kazakh pipeline flow set to reach China this week
Kazakh crude flowing through a landmark pipeline opened four months ago is set to reach China in a week, helping the world's number two oil consumer cut back on spot imports, a Chinese industry official said.
Singapore: Kazakh crude flowing through a landmark pipeline opened four months ago is set to reach China in a week, helping the world's number two oil consumer cut back on spot imports, a Chinese industry official said.
The pipeline will ultimately supply 4.5 million tonnes this year, equivalent to about 4 per cent of China's total oil imports last year, part of Beijing's move to boost supply security with more long-term contracts from key suppliers.
"It will start feeding the refineries in May," said an official from state-run China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC) from Beijing, referring to plants in Xinjiang and Lanzhou run by its listed subsidiary PetroChina.
PetroChina, Asia's big-gest oil and gas producer, operates refineries mostly in the country's north and supplies 40 per cent of the Chinese fuel market. The supply rate matches industry estimates that the $800 million, 600-mile (965 kilometres) pipeline would be running at half its designed capacity of 10 million tonnes a year (200,000 barrels per day) in 2006 and operate at full tilt by end-2007.
On a daily basis, the pipe-line will carry 137,000 barrels of oil to Chinese refineries from May, or about 2.3 per cent of China's current total refinery production.
The Atasu-Alashanko pipeline is China's first international crude line. China has been lobbying Moscow for over a decade to build an oil pipeline from East Siberia of Russia, the world's second-largest exporter after Saudi Arabia.
Until now China has imported Kazakh crude oil by train, taking 26,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2005, customs data show.
The CNPC official said crude supply via rail will continue even after the flow via pipeline is underway, but he declined to give further details.
Most of the new oil will be pumped from CNPC-operated oilfields in its Central Asian neighbour, including the Aktobe field in the northwest and the Kumkol fields that CNPC recently acquired when it bought Canada's Petro-Kazakhstan.
The Kazakh-China pipe-line ends at the Chinese border town of Alashanko in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, from where CNPC has laid a 153-mile pipeline to carry oil to its Dushanzi refinery.
PetroChina's refineries in Xinjiang as well as Lan-zhou, the fuel supply hub in the vast, remote western China region, are expected to raise crude throughput this year to process the increased supply of Kazakh oil.
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