TAIPEI -- State controlled energy firms in China and Taiwan are preparing to jointly explore for natural gas in deepwater in the Taiwan Strait, having failed to make significant shallow-water finds despite nearly a decade of prospecting together.
Chinese oil and gas giant Cnooc and CPC are now drawing up a pact to
jointly explore the northern end of the 180 km wide Taiwan Strait, and
may invite a foreign partner to join them, a CPC official told the Wall
Street Journal. He declined to be named.
Energy-deficient China's search for offshore
oil and gas reserves has pit it against several of its neighbors,
resulting in naval jousting with Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines near
disputed islands and atolls.
CPC has been working with Chinese oil companies in several overseas
exploration ventures for over a decade. But since China friendly Ma Ying
Jeou became Taiwan's President in 2008 and the subsequent signing of a
landmark trade pact with China, both Beijing and Taipei have been
expanding economic cooperation.
Large gas reserves have already been found in undisputed Chinese
waters south of Hong Kong by Husky Energy, working with Cnooc's listed
unit, Cnooc. Gas from their Liwan field is due to be piped onshore from
late 2013.
No other major discoveries have been made in the South China Sea
since then, and in the meantime China's energy deficit has resulted in
soaring natural gas imports in the first nine months of 2012 they rose 35.5% to 30.5 Bcm.
Taiwan imports more than 95% of its energy needs, shipping in 14 to
15 Bcm of LNG annually, mostly from Qatar, Indonesia and Malaysia.
The new Cnooc-CPC project follows the failure a 2002 Cnooc-CPC joint
venture to find gas under shallow waters in the southern end of the
Taiwan Strait and the Chaozhou Shantou Basin off the coast of China's
Guangdong province, officials at the two energy firms said. That deal is
due to be terminated later this year.
Under the new deal, the CPC official said, Cnooc and CPC will explore
off the coast of Keelung and Hsinchu counties of Taiwan. A formal
agreement is expected by late 2013.
Cnooc is transforming itself from a shallow water domestic oil producer to a global player with deepwater, unconventional and conventional hydrocarbon assets in countries ranging from Uganda to Argentina and the United States
In July, Cnooc agreed to acquire Nexen for $15.1 billion, which if
approve by the government will allow it to absorb deepwater drilling
technology Nexen is using in six Gulf of Mexico prospects.
Cnooc is now working domestically with foreign partners in at least
11 deepwater projects in an effort to grow its oil and gas reserves at
home.
All foreign companies exploring in deepwater
in South China Sea have signed production sharing contracts with Cnooc,
which retains the right to take a majority interest in any commercial
oil or gas discovery.
However, it isn't clear what arrangement will apply to the new
Cnooc-CPC joint venture. Among international energy majors active in the
South China Sea are Chevron, BP and ENI.
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