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China completes tunnel for new west-east gas pipeline
YICHANG—Workers on Monday
completed a tunnel under China’s Yangtze River for a major gas pipeline
that will run from the southwest province of Sichuan to Shanghai.
With a diameter of 3.08 meters and a length of 1,405 meters, the tunnel
lay about 20 meters beneath the riverbed, connecting two wells on each
bank in Yichang City, Hubei Province, said Liu Juzheng, head of the
Hubei section of the Sichuan-Shanghai pipeline.
The 2,203-km pipeline, with the mainline extending 1,700 km, is another
“energy artery” to fuel the booming but energy-insufficient east
following the West-East gas project.
The pipeline is expected to channel 12.1 billion cubic meters of natural
gas annually from Sichuan’s Puguang field to central and eastern
regions, including Chongqing Municipality, the provinces of Hubei, Anhui,
Jiangxi, Jiangsu and Zhejiang, and Shanghai.
The tunnel, which took 325 days to finish, is the first of five to cross
under the Yangtze, which originates in Qinghai Province and empties into
the East China Sea near Shanghai.
Industry experts say this new gas pipeline, with an investment of 62.7
billion yuan (US$8.25 billion), offers an opportunity to the country’s
underdeveloped west to tap its advantage in resources for development.
The pipeline is scheduled to be finished by late 2010 and the gas is
expected to help reduce carbon dioxide emissions by tens of millions of
tons annually, said Chen Deming, Vice Minister of the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC). Proven reserves of the Puguang
gas field stood at 356.1 billion cubic meters, according to China
Petrochemical Corporation (Sinopec).
China’s proven reserves of natural gas total 2.66 trillion cubic meters.
The government has been promoting the use of natural gas to improve
energy efficiency and cut air pollution.
Under an NDRC proposal on natural gas development, China aims to
increase its natural gas pipeline network to 44,000 kilometers by 2010
to meet demand.
Although China’s natural gas output will reach 94 billion cubic meters
in 2010 from 58.6 billion in 2006, the country would still need imports
to fill a gap of 16 billion cubic meters a year. In Shanghai, demand for
natural gas has soared from four million cubic meters in 2003 to 1.9
billion in 2005.
In 2004, China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) opened its West-East gas
pipeline, which runs more than 4,000 kilometers and channels 1.2 billion
cubic meters of gas to Shanghai from the Tarim Basin in the country’s
westmost region of Xinjiang annually.
CNPC is to build a second West-East pipeline to carry gas imported from
Central Asia to the Pearl River and Yangtze River deltas. Construction
will begin in 2008 and gas supply in 2010. The designed annual
production volume will be 30 billion cubic meters.—Xinhua
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