China’s Sinopec group, parent of Sinopec Corp., aims to more than double its receiving capacity of LNG over the next six years and lift domestic shale gas production by two-thirds by 2020.
The plans are part of the state energy firm’s efforts for clean fuel production to account for half of its total energy supply by 2023.
Sinopec will have 60 billion cubic meters (Bcm) of natural gas supply capacity, which includes both imports and domestic production, by 2023, the group said on April 2. It produced 27 Bcm of gas in 2017.
The group plans to add new receiving facilities for imported LNG along China’s east coast to a total of 26 million tonnes annually by 2023, up from the current 9 million tonnes including the recently launched terminal in Tianjin.
“We are going to expand [Qingdao] Dongjiakou terminal to 8 million tonnes and then 10 to 12 million tonnes by phases, same with Tianjin,” Dai Zhaoming, the group’s head of development and planning, told reporters, adding that expansion projects will only need local authorities’ approval.
Sinopec will soon formally approve a plan to build a new terminal in eastern Zhejiang province, Dai said.
The company has also made new advances in its shale gas business, with a new discovery in the Weirong Block in southwestern Sichuan province, said Sun Huanquan, general manager of the group’s oilfield development division.
Sun didn’t elaborate on the new find, but said it should contribute to the group’s target of 10 Bcm of shale gas production by 2020.
Sinopec operates China’s largest commercial shale gas field, Fuling in Chongqing in the southwest, and produced just above 6 Bcm last year.
A top company executive said in February that Sinopec’s shale gas business was almost in the red without government subsidies, illustrating the complex geology despite improving technology and cost-cutting measures.
The company also said on April 1 that it plans to build 1,000 natural gas filling stations by 2023.
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